(This Life) Part 10 – Chapter 1: The Dream Catcher’s Tale
By bhi
- 1854 reads
“I - who once was flesh, chaste – was chased and made unchaste,
Unclothed, opened and displayed,
Tattooed with the word, at the crossroads of the world….
I am bound, bound, bound…..”
We find her beneath the diseased elm –
Sickened roots still supple sucking,
Circuited circles bedded, nippled
To its immaculate mothers’ many wombs,
Their sustaining knowledge, deeply seeded,
Now gently guiding, moving,
Preparing it for the end of its days -
Head crowned with thorned clouds, red sunned,
Stretching silver towards those exquisite
Points of extinction,
Where green melds with blue
And there is no distinction
Between this and that,
That which was, is and about to be,
Silkworms threading her outstretched arms,
Cocoons, each a moment subtly spun
From somewhere, to the left of here and there, nowhere,
Voices, them and us, suffocated,
You and I, dark and light, hours
Waiting to be ripped open and sung.
We’re paused:
The dogs’ silent bark echoes in The Ridings;
The wychelm spring trickles down her legs,
Earth’s menses deep red dribbling.
We’re paused….watch
Rising pasts rupture, the elm’s gathered stock,
The run of rivers, chasms and canyons chased,
The woodpecker beating out the rhythm of the hearse,
The tik tok of the mourning’s desperation,
Voices, once blocked, locked, conjured now,
Flooding up through the wet earth
And into her, flesh glistening guano white.
We would pass…
She calls my name.
Paused we are
We are mesmerised.
Her eyes, her eyes, her eyes draw, her eyes pull,
Her eyes, her eyes, her eyes, eye, eye
Into their vortex drowning we fall……
“Take my hand,” I hear her say, “take it.”
I
Jump! New line – new paragraph
Cutting rain outside. She shivers. The moon hidden behind the kitchen smoke tracing its way into nowhere. They’re leaving in the morning. ‘To be with your father,’ her mother says. She has no notion of what ‘father’ means, has grown up, with her grandmother, surrounded by aunts, real and not, their soft shuffling in the shared house, voices whispering of this and that, the chores of planting and gathering and binding and washing and cutting and grinding and kneading and the oh so so soft ache of being.
Wild, Wild, Run wild she has, leading her dogs through the alleys, across the fields, chasing rats and the choreographed crows which, now, have learnt to hide at her not so subtle approach. She’s been fed brown rice and raw sugar and salty milk, and the hard sweets which she’s shared with her cousins, whose unwashed perfume hangs on her every etym.
And now she’s leaving. Space. This space, which was hers, soon to be vacant.
Her uncle, her mother’s favourite younger, an army man, tall and straight, stands at the door. “Come,” he says, “I have a leaving present.” In his hands shines a five cornered coin. He leads her into the courtyard, away from the house, the farthest corner, behind the banyan tree, its branches festooned with broken dolls, clay frayed by wind and rain.
Wind and rain Wind and rain Wind and rain
the last image before a thread of wet silk is tightened around her throat.
Dry songs black swing through the ether of memories that mothers hoard,
From behind the bars of her eyes she watches her, still playing, wild, wild, leading her dogs,
Then the hammering of the day breaks her,
AIE AIE AIE the so so hard ache of being,
living beyond the span of her child.
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Comments
Stunning
Absorbing, rich in detail. I found myself immersed. Amost a song/aria/opera in its pace.
So good, a world into which the reader is mesmerised by unfolding dimensions without ever being repulsed.
That, I feel, is how to make folk listen, want more.
Best
L
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This is absolutely wonderful
This is absolutely wonderful - so raw and moving. One to read and reread. Congratulations on all your cherries - very well deserved
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Good to see you back, bhi.
Good to see you back, bhi. This one is dense, absorbing and in an original format for a poem. A worthy continuation of the "This Life" theme. Paul
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Those last three lines must
Those last three lines must evoke terror in anyone with a child. You gather the doom like dark clouds in one of those American storms, a disaster set in motion by history and tradition which destroys everything
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This is our Poem of the Week!
This is our Poem of the Week! Congratulations!
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Well done BH - very much
Well done BH - very much deserved!
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living beyond is often beyond
living beyond is often beyond imaginatioin. Well done for taking us there.
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