Unsexed [Why is it that whenever I have a ton of stuff to do, I suddenly have a poem to write?]

Friday, October 8, 2010

Unsexed


Come, you spirits
That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here,
And fill me from the crown to the toe topful.
--Macbeth (I.v.40-42)


I read once that cloistered nuns,
When caught in the torrents of desire,
Would grind up the buds of roses
And drink their pulp, in order
To abate lustful cravings.

Their penitence sheathed
In self-denying acts,
They found salvation in an Order;
In a balance, finely crafted
Of holy love--of chaste touch.

Crushing their lust to pulp,
They drank full the very pap
Of the un-budded passions
Which they denied themselves,
Clipped before blossom's flourish.

I can see them,
Their silver chalices
Of blush liquid
Tipped back on pale lips,
Drinking a world of sin away,

As Yam, god of the sea-
The world his goblet, tipped
Back on vast lips-
Drank the sea's roaring wake.
How did it taste?

Was their liquid lust sweet?
Did it burn as they swallowed,
Dross rising like froth
Away from their golden flesh,
Burned holy in denial's fire?

I, too, drink to holiness,
Have cloistered and denied,
Skimmed sin's dross, and strong-willed
The passion of my wiles. I try
To follow suit, seven self-flagellating nuns,

Painfully, as they rise above.


--Alicia (2010)

A few hours alone in Galway...becomes a poem.

Saturday, October 2, 2010


Galway, Ireland



On a promontory between two rivers

flowing out to sea, I walk alone.


One river thrashes virulent.

The other flows placid.


In their parallel journeys, one fights

as the other accedes to tide’s inevitable purge;


a resigned recognition

of the unjust workings of the world.


I am alone with the silence and the fog,

the flecks of rain on the grass at my feet,


and the overcast glow of the sky

as the sun’s faint orange ekes through white.


Pale light glosses the evening; a reminder

of another day, another era fading.


Smoke drifts from distant chimneys;

the heavy ash a smell, black as this land’s history.


It rises silent above the rooftops,

carrying secrets unuttered, toxic.


I pace to the sound of my own blood

pulsing behind my ears.


I accede to the rhythm of my heartbeat,

as the rivers accede to their end.


The smoke accedes to the sky,

as the people accede to their myth.


The land accedes to the waves,

as history crumbles in clods of broken past.


The sea is giant tear, rolling down the cheek

of a nation, stained with blood and ash.



--Alicia (2010)