Love's Progress 8-17
By Kilb50
- 946 reads
(viii)
The silkworm
in its
husk,
the translucent
beat of a
penitent's heart,
a ballustrade
overflowing
the boundary
of existence, its
pupation a fever-dance,
shedding
skin and flesh, rippling
like liquid metal,
searing the night.
(ix)
A humming bird
suspended, the delicate
point of its amber
bill a thin straw
of bone piping
sugar into blood,
replacing collagen
with syrup, lethargy
with nectar.
The emperor watches
with cleaving tongue,
distended from
all physical reality.
Silence but for
the hummingbird's wings;
the great hall
of the palace warped in
flickering time-space.
A swift movement
captures it
and he grips
the small, well-filled
body, considers
squeezing the bird's
sweet juices like
a plump soft apricot
into his mouth.
"It heats my palm"
he says. "Its flight
becomes my flight;
its gravity balances my heart
and soul." He unfurls
be-jewelled fingers and the bird
breaks free. The emperor's
physician bows
his head and writes:
'Pipe nectar. Pipe sugar
into blood. Replace lethargy
with swift movement.'
(x)
Love comes to me in
the form of a snake.
Its eyes burn my senses,
engorge my diminished
power, its tongue
glistens and robs
me of strength as I
struggle to draw
my knife.
"Do not kill me" it says.
The voice is that of
an adult woman,
sensual and clean. "Let
me come to you" she says
"and I will
show you love afresh."
The snake wraps
itself around
my leg, warms me,
soothing with the
sound of its
spitting tongue. We anchor
and my knife falls
as I accept her kiss.
(xi)
The ritual of impregnation
empty and ethereal,
scheduled for a new moon.
His desire is for
a queen of silk
her wings to enfold -
a moth-queen
to mount and worship.
The emperor awaits in his
perfumed chamber
as his youngest wife is
washed, confirmed,
chalked, delivered to him.
The silk garment
that covers her
is removed, laid
before his feet
to gather and scent.
She is held and he watches
this with a close eye
as the shaman invokes
the mother of sky
and forest. His wife remains
silent, aloof, stern
even, unlike others
who struggle and are dismissed.
And when the physician
inserts the worm
she does not scream this young
wife of his, but endures
with moth-eyes that
seem to him already partially
formed. New spirits
are called, this time
the spirits of
the fathers. They will
entice the worm to travel
deep inside her
virgin womb. And when
it is done the emperor
offers up himself -
shedding his own robe
bearing liquid silk
that will mark
his imprint,
the silver wings
she will grow
stamped by a royal cipher.
(xii)
The river at night -
a creek of swelling pearls.
I taste warm succulent wine,
hear a thunderous drum
of hooves casting
a shadow across
our rosy hemosphere,
the un-earthly
hooves of the chthonic
solar-lion berating us
like a nest of
screetching owls.
It is a signal - a warning
foretold - of tar, fetters
and dust
herding the true believers
towards the expanding city
and blazing night.
We are prisoners of the word,
ambushed, snared and manacled
by hatred's unrefined elements.
Night engulfs us. Night cools
our blood. Night has stolen
ambrosial love.
(xiii)
The Queen of Silk
is housed in a tower
of glass.
On the twelfth day
the physician peers
through a fractured
telescope. Yes,
she is changing,
he says,
like a nymph bursting
through glycerine,
cocooned
within her woven gown
singing the siren
songs
of her new species,
attuned to
every sphere.
(xiv)
She has become
his Moth-Queen.
The physician unlocks
the glass door
and the emperor
sees her
magnificent wings
that clap and
stir the air.
Her hair, once entwined,
is now transformed
into moth-stubble.
The hands that he
held have now dissolved
from her grasp.
"My Queen" he says,
and notices her flesh
withered beyond repair.
"Bow your head and be humble.
Do not be expectant
in the eternal
age of non-liberty."
Her eyes burn and her black
moth-tongue melts.
"Love has been cast into the unknown"
she whispers: "Now I too
will feast on love."
(xv)
Look - I am hooded and blind,
cast adrift in my love's
ferryboat
anchored now by the
hollow leg of the
Tree-Man.
The heat of darkness
boils the slurried river,
the sharpened
blades induce the
innocent to screams. I hear
my love call
from Satan's burning city.
I recall her softness, her sweetness
and pull the hood tight.
(xvi)
At first light, alone
in the forest,
he wakes and sees
a woodcutter
cutting
tall pines.
The band-saw is red -
though not with blood,
with sap -
and steam-dust rises
from the cutter's neck,
from his feet,
from the top
of his
beenie-clad head.
When he stops
to rest
the forest falls silent.
No screams from
these proud trees.
Stoic in death
they offer themselves
without so much
as a faint rustle,
stand tall until
that moment
when they are
spliced, dispatched
at the shins,
and fall.
The cutter pauses,
wipes his brow with a glove,
the slow unripe crack
at the base of the trunk
like kitten-bone.
He drags the trimmed
and butchered carcasses
through the forest to
his shack by the lake.
Later he'll cut some more,
re-shape wood into coffins,
instruments of torture,
sell to Satan's outriders
in the dark city beyond.
At night, when his wife
has massaged his swollen hams
and they sleep in their slatted bed,
the lake comes alive.
Newly-hatched damsonflys
wrestle free from crystal
skins, shake themselves,
unfold their wings,
attune virgin senses
to the dark.
The boy waits and listens:
they sing a buzz-song
in the reeds -
a concerto, a lament -
to fallen trees and for a lost father's
dust-smitten soul.
(xvii)
The light of earth.
The aether
of darkness.
A dragonfly breaks
out of its sugary-jacket -
a dazzling red goddess
waking from
her winter
sleep.
She shakes out
her bed, scatters
glycerine on her pillow
meets with
the great censer air,
spreads her magnificent wings -
a prism transforming
water into wine.
She flys
from her glittering
pool and annoints two
passers by -
a spring lady and
her willow man
out worshipping
the mid-day sun.
The goddess dances
between them,
gives thanks
to her sister Artemis,
loops her bright body -
the scented vial -
watches the spring lady
lay herself down
laughing in the long grass,
taste atom-seed
and begin to grow.
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This for me is poetry of the
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