I'm still quite happy.
That's all.
So about my last post...
Tuesday, November 20, 2012Posted by Alicia147 at 8:39 PM 0 comments
Good things come in waves.
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Do you ever feel like all of the positive energy in the universe has suddenly directed itself at you in a most inexplicable way?
After experiencing so much pain and loneliness for really as long as I can remember, it's quite a refreshing change. I feel like I've finally allowed myself to be open to good things. It's freeing. But at the same time, there's still part of me that finds it hard to trust that happiness can stay; part of me that still caries my darkness in light moments. Perhaps that's what makes life interesting.
Time will tell, as always.
"There is so much dark light is space
and so many dimensions suddenly yellow
because the wind does not fall
and the leaves do not breathe."
--Pablo Neruda
Posted by Alicia147 at 2:46 PM 1 comments
Flight
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Butterflies in patterned fray,
blunt cut grass,
and strong hands
sectioning the world as citrus,
on a rotating axis
the size of a needle's eye.
A flurry of birds lifting off
in frantic spirals over ocean,
they crash in their frenzied spray.
They slice the sun;
an omniscient jewel over azure.
Oh take, oh break, oh take me away.
What is the difference
between fight and flight?
Love and hate?
How long does it take
for a bruise to fade?
Will she be made new
once she has bled for seven days?
After forty days and forty nights,
drowning in a solipsistic sea?
Will land only find her
once she accedes to her saline fate?
--Alicia (2012)
Posted by Alicia147 at 9:23 PM 0 comments
Inconvenient Moments
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
A bright day.
You in your white dress,
like a bound foot:
a vision
of submission;
so small,
if you turned sideways,
you would almost
disappear.
The sound
of grating steel
against glass.
Gasps.
My ruined white
Ford.
My lesser self
in the parking lot,
trying to parce together
the pieces of my rage
with cellophane
and duct tape.
All the while,
the pearls
around my wrist,
they're wrapped in metal chain.
--Alicia (2012)
Posted by Alicia147 at 12:52 AM 0 comments
Poetic Irony
You prayed for rain,
Your eyes closed and head back,
Standing prone,
Arms out and hands wide;
A brazen invocation
At the static sun.
Now you cower
In ionized air,
Streaked with the
Weight of your wished fate.
--Alicia (2012)
Posted by Alicia147 at 12:42 AM 0 comments
Love suits you well
Sunday, April 29, 2012
Posted by Alicia147 at 1:20 AM 0 comments
Playing With Fire
Monday, April 23, 2012
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Posted by Alicia147 at 12:38 AM 0 comments
Ecclesia
Saturday, April 21, 2012
I am from the slow unravel
of slip knots,
and streams of water
springing from rocks.
A helium balloon unquiet,
I gage the alignment of the spheres
as I rise, rise.
Held down by ginseng and jasmine,
I approach the limit line
until zero becomes
an untouchable axis;
memory, a hollow light.
I am from emerald streaked white
horror, my once linen ascete
sunk down deep
in garnet wine.
And I will never measure up
to your golden ruler,
idyllic image of a Mary, Madonna
pearl of blessed virtue,
to have and to hold - at arm's distance,
because you want my light
without my dark.
I'll unfold my pain
in silver triangles;
throbbing, metallic.
As a rock absorbs water,
a cut, six skin layers deep,
takes ten seconds to bleed.
I'll bite my tongue and note
the bitter copper taste.
--Alicia (2012)
Posted by Alicia147 at 12:49 AM 0 comments
Morning Prayer
Monday, April 16, 2012
It's a small wonder
I never cease to exist
The way Monday morning
Blends into Tuesday's obituaries,
The way we drift among this gray haze,
Our pallid illusions.
I sit silent, listening to the sound
Of no voice on the other line.
Just ringing.
--Alicia (2012)
Posted by Alicia147 at 11:06 PM 0 comments
. . .
Monday, February 6, 2012This night will stay
Clothed in your miasma
I'll go down deep
In dim red lights,
Finger the edges
Of a ticking time-bomb,
And carry my lust
In fistfuls of air.
What would I know
Of love? Of loss?
I only wanted your orange in azure,
Above a swelling tide.
The sand instead waits
Yearning, dry.
An honest disaster,
I'll collect my frayed edges,
As water, spilled.
I'll apologize, disappear.
--Alicia (2012)
Posted by Alicia147 at 1:53 AM 1 comments
What makes a life?
Saturday, January 14, 2012This stunning poem, about the mystery of life and spontaneous generation, was written by the Irish poet Sinead Morrissey when she was pregnant with her first child. We were lucky enough to hear a private poetry reading by her in Belfast on England Semester last year, and I was struck by her humility and genuine sense of wonder. How can I possibly write anything worth reading when I've just re-visited one of the most awe-inspiring pieces of literature that I know of? Instead, I chose to copy the poem out of my copy of her book. Enjoy.
Matter
from Through the Square Window by Sinead Morrissey
Aristotle observed and recorded it all-
that out of rainwater, the marrow
of the human spine, foam from the sea,
or the putrefying carcasses of bulls and horses
spring living beings: frogs, serpents, anchovies,
bees and scarabs, locusts, weevils, maggots.
St Augustine agreed: what matter that the smallest
(and most meddlesome) of God’s creatures
find no mention in the chronicle of the Ark?
So long as alluvial mud remained, or rotted
wood, of rinsed white bones of crocodiles
after the wash abated and the salvaged couple
and their braying entourage were pitched
on top of Ararat, wasps and gnats and fleas
would manifest once more in clouds and colonies
without a union of the sexes (like Mary)
and the earth would effortlessly teem.
Recipes for rats and ‘small white puppies
a child might play with’ followed
during the Middle Ages, which typically included
hay, excrement, dirty shirts, wool
simmered for an hour then hung to dry
in an outhouse or chicken coop
(the air of such places being itself
so mutable and laden with infusoria,
it acts as a bridge to live). Golems
moulded from clay still needed a spell
to keep them animated, as though by
growing bigger and more complicated,
the offspring of the elements
were in danger of winding down,
yet Paracelsus, arch-advocate of decay,
saw no reason not to apply
the laws of spontaneous generation
to ourselves: let the semen of a man
putrefy itself for forty days in a sealed
cucurbite, it shall begin, at last, to live.
Fed on an arcanum of human blood
and kept in darkness, his fleet homunculus
had all the features of a human child.
Leeuwenhoek bore this experiment in mind
when, decades later, using his own microscope,
he scrutinized his sperm, magnified
as much as three hundred times and fashioned
like a bell, with the wrought perfection
of a tiny man curled inside each globule.
Ovists may have envisaged instead
a sacred cabinet of children, encased
inside each egg, opening in time
both backwards and forwards
to the breaking of Eve and the End
of the World, the likelihood remained:
whether one believed in this, or the evidence
of a light-blanched workshop and a knack
for polished glass, or whether one went back
to what the Greeks expressed
as the facts of reproduction,
a woman’s quest for contraception,
stacked against the odds of dogged visitors
finding lodging in the womb
at any beckoning, was hopeless.
No wonder Soranus suggested water from blacksmiths’.
No wonder olive oil, the pulp of a pomegranate,
honey, pine resin, mercury, beeswax,
pennyroyal, tobacco juice, arrowroot, tansy
were burnt, brewed, inhaled, ingested,
inserted into the cervix, or buried in fields left fallow
if the coppery stain of menstruation
persisted into the seventh day.
No wonder witches consulted the sky.
And though I know, thanks in part to Pasteur–
to his gauze impediments and penchant
for boiling–how your came to enter,
how you came to roll and hiccup and kick
against the windowless dark, feet to my heart
and skull to the pelvic cradle, I still think
of our lovemaking as a kind of door
to wherever you were, waiting in matter,
spooled into a form I have not yet been shown
by the umprompted action of nature,
by something corrupting in an earthenware pot
in Corinth, say, or Kingstown.
Stay the wind on a river eight weeks after equinox–
witness blue-green mayflies lift off
like a shaken blanket; add algae
and alchemical stones to the lake floor
in the strengthening teeth of winter, what swans.
Happy Saturday. :]
Posted by Alicia147 at 2:05 PM 0 comments