Monday, February 23, 2015

I see the North Star in the deep black sky...



I see the North Star in the deep black sky
And I go to the mountains guided by
Its light -- I shall quarry those great ancient
Sentinels for their stone, carve them, patient,
Play mason, cover them with blood, no faults --
I will build my staircase, no rests, no halts
Ascend to yonder void -- you may watch me
O Moon, you may watch me toil, and then see
Me suffer, but know that  I need only
Starlight and your moonbeams, dew and holy
Night air are my manna -- watch me lay waste
To the land, behold, O Moon, my long chase
To the Heavens -- and I will reach my goal:
The North Star, and it will swallow me whole



Saturday, February 14, 2015

Before time began...



Before time began, the Creator in his grand
Design, eons ahead, thought of you, and he planned
This specimen of Man: "I will make him handsome
And tall, give him a forelock for charm, smile winsome
And sweet, give him brains along with brawn -- he will be
Smart and strong, intelligent and thoughtful, and he
Will dream of the moon and sun while he walks the ground --
I will give him Apollo's image, dark hair crowned
With wreaths of ambition as with arrows and bow
He chases down rare thoughts to make real -- I bestow
Him with vigorous arms and chest and back to bear
Endeavors only he can attain -- nearly there:
To perfect him for her, his beauty's beholder,
I shall scatter some freckles across each shoulder."



Monday, February 9, 2015

Mermaid Yearnings


Four months before I turned nineteen,
I swore I’d fall in love.
With hook and line I’d catch a fish,
And bring him up above.

So then I dreamt of marlins, sharks,
Swift sturgeons and the sort,
But Neptune sent me lavishly,
A mermaid from his court.

He blessed me thus and summoned forth,
This Nereid of song,
With nacre tail and foam-blue hair,
And magic rare and strong.

To lovelorn me she sang and sang,
Emerging from the sea,
With star-filled eyes and salted lips,
She said, “Now follow me.”

She lured me, pulled me, dragged me down,
Into the endless blue:
Thalassic doom of mortal me,
I knew this to be true.

Though beguiled by this lovely nymph,
I feared her tender kiss,
For I can grow no fins, no gills:
I’d die in her abyss.

Thus linger long and I will drown,
Know not their mysteries,
Perish, not see their ocean deep,
Nor join their reveries.


Monday, January 26, 2015

The Man on the Moon


I killed the Man on the Moon,
Because he was watching me.
Because he had big old eyes,
Attached to his big old brain,
And because of how far he could see.

He knew many things,
My thoughts and my dreams,
And wrote them all down in his book.
"Sinner beware,"
Said he from up there,
"To know you I need only to look."

This sinner took note,
This sinner looked back,
Straight out to the Man on the Moon.

"Old man you beware,"
Replied sinner from there,
"You saw me and now I see you.

"I see with my eyes,
Attached to my brain,
And see that I frighten you.

"You live far up there,
Stuck fast out of fear,
And now I see why you do what you do."

He saw my thoughts still,
My intention to kill.

I went to the moon,
Not a moment too soon,

And I took away his book.
The moon shook.

Look.

I now am the Man on the Moon.


Thursday, January 8, 2015

Goodnight, Luna


My name is Luna and while I've had my share of nightmares and sleep problems, none compare to this particular experience. The summer between sophomore and junior year of high school, I went to sleep away summer program for the first time. It was hosted at a college campus near my house, was to last for ten days, which was, up to then, the longest time I had ever been away from my family. On top of that, my period was due, and I was at the age where the logistics of getting my period away from home was something that really worried me.

Those were two things that contributed to my stress during that very first day, but there were other things. Some of the rules that were put in place by the program directors made me worry. If you opened them between 10 PM and 8 AM, an alarm would go off. In the event of a curfew breach, all the people in the hall were expected to line up outside their doors for a head count. We were given keys that we would have to pay $75 if we misplaced. I was at the age where having all these rules that I could potentially tread on gave me all sorts of worry.

All that said, the first day went fine. The activities were reasonably fun, and the people there were decent. My roommates were decent – I was in a triple – and one of them brought a whole suitcase full of snacks, which I thought was absurd. But anyhow, they let me have the top bunk, and when the counselor came at 9:59 PM to take roll, I was already tucked in, ready to go to sleep.

I couldn’t stop thinking about the rules. What if I needed a drink of water? What if there was some kind of an emergency? Surely, in a dorm full of teenagers, at least one of them was going to get their period, need to go to the bathroom. What then? Would they just have to open the door and set off the alarm?

These were the thoughts that occupied me, and I stared straight up at the ceiling at this splotch on the wall. It was bright enough outside where I could see a hazy outline of a dark stain on the ceiling right about my face. I don’t know if they still do Rorschach inkblot tests, but that’s how I felt staring at the stain. I figured that by staring at something that reminded me of a period stain – and then, it looked like the Big Island – I would stop worrying about my actual period, and that was sort of correct.

From the second I went under the covers, covered my head with a sweater, and closed my eyes, my brain was firing on all cylinders. I couldn’t possibly fall asleep, as preoccupied as I was. Then came the mess on the ceiling, and soon, I became fixated with that, how at one moment it was Hawaii, then the next it seemed more like a biscuit split open, then something else. It changed, little by little, and I felt all the more relaxed looking at it than I was before.

When the stain got boring, I only needed to turn my head to the left and look at snack girl fast asleep on her single bed. The light outside cast shadows from the shrubs outside, and I knew it was moonlight because as time passed, the shadows would shift. I spent a good deal of the night doing that, switching between ceiling splotch and shadows, all the while willing myself to attempt to fall asleep.

I really did try, and though I was starting to feel my eyes straining, nothing happened when I shut them. No matter what, I was uncomfortable. It was too hot, and then it was too cold. I suddenly wanted a drink of water. I wanted to go to the bathroom. I was hungry. I felt like vomiting. Nothing felt right. My head started to hurt.

I felt as if I were floating on the surface of the ocean, and every time I shut my eyes, I would only go down superficially, and that there was a darker column of water below me that I couldn’t sink into – simply put, I couldn’t fall asleep.

This wasn’t new. I’ve had sleepless nights before, and they had always preceded stressful or exciting mornings. From the age of three to six, I couldn’t fall asleep, or at least, I couldn’t remember sleeping. Up until I was ten, I regularly sleepwalked, and it became so much of a problem that my parents had to take me to a doctor to get checked out.

All this to say, I’m no stranger to sleep abnormalities, and I knew that after just this one sleepless night, I would have to find a good cup of coffee to keep me active the following day.

I shut my eyes and attempted to fall asleep for the last time when I felt someone slap my side. Alarmed, I opened my eyes and tried to cry out, but I couldn’t. Cold panic washed over me and when I tried to sit up, I barely got high enough to look at who it was.

Two figures, two girls, and I thought they must have been my roommates, ready to pull a cruel trick on me. No – to my left, snack girl was still asleep, and I would have noticed them climbing onto my bunk anyways. I let my eyes adjust in the darkness and saw that they were identical, lean girls, with straight black hair coming down to their shoulders. The one on the right was sitting on my thighs and she wore a green raincoat.

“You’re awake,” they said in my voice. I looked closer, and they looked back at me. They were me, both of them were me. “Hello, Luna.”

Believe me, even sleep-deprived and worried out of my mind, I still knew that something like that was impossible. At the time, they were as real to me as every other fixture of the room, all the furniture, my snack girl roommate, the blankets around me, the shadows on the walls, the stain right overhead. I knew that they were real, that they were flesh and blood, and even now, I can’t explain myself. 

I had only shut my eyes for a few seconds, and they appeared in that time. When they ‘woke’ me – and I say ‘woke’ loosely because I could swear that I hadn’t fallen asleep, I was awake that entire night – it was instantaneous. All of me was just as fatigued, exhausted as I was right before they arrived.

I realized suddenly that I couldn't move. It wasn't just that they were sitting on my legs, it was that I simply couldn't move anything below my neck. I was completely paralyzed and helpless. The two of them kept on watching me, smiling because I’m sure they knew what I was thinking.
“Luna,” said Left-Luna, “You need to get up early tomorrow. You need to be at the…”
She turned her head aside and began talking to Right-Luna and I couldn't hear what they were saying. They were laughing quietly between one another and every time I felt a new wave of terror rising up in me, they looked straight at me.

I tried calming myself down, and watching the stain on the ceiling again, watching its boundaries tremble and rearrange, was making me relax. Suddenly, I found myself propping up my upper body on my elbows, bringing me closer to the two other Lunas. It was much more comfortable watching them from that position, and when I looked at them again, they started to talk to me.

I can’t remember the details of the conversation, but I remember that it was mundane. They asked me things about my life and the people around me and I answered them easily. I remember, though, that the three of us were all talking in low voices, but still, it was probably loud enough to wake my roommates, but they told me they would stay asleep.

As calm as I had become, I never shook the feeling that the two other Lunas were off. They looked at me together, or they looked at each other and said things too quietly for me to hear. When I got uncomfortable – when I said I was thirsty, or that I had a headache – they sat down heavily on my legs. Left-Luna would grab my ankle or Right-Luna would grab my wrist, and I could feel this low frequency hum and my bed would tremble.

They could feel all my thoughts and emotions, and went from laughing with me to darkening the room and sending my skin crawling with cold ants.

“This is the first time you’ve seen us,” said Left-Luna, as she dug her nails into my ankle. The hum grew louder and I felt as if my brain were trembling with it. “Both of us. Usually it’s so hard to even wake you up, and even then, you can’t see us.”

“But we see you, Luna,” said the other one, “We see you. Goodnight, Luna. Sweet dreams.”

I found that I couldn’t speak anymore, and they sent me lying flat again, arms pressed to my sides. My mouth was shut but I could feel my jaw lock, my bottom teeth pressing against the backs of my top ones, pushing forward and forward as if I were trying to blast through an overbite. It hurt like nothing I’d ever felt before and the bed started quaking under me, and the hum became so deafening that I just wanted to wake up.

Only, the thing was, all of it stopped suddenly, and I was just where I always was – lying on my back in bed, staring at the ceiling. The stain was there. The shadows on the wall had moved, and I could tell from the light that I had been awake for hours and hours. I remained like that all the way until the sun peeked through the plants outside.

I won’t forget this, and I can’t explain it – I can only tell it as truthfully as I remember. When I got back home, I looked it up and read about sleep paralysis, which is about as good of an explanation as I can get. All I know is that from my fallible, malleable memory, I did not sleep a moment that night. Mentally, I was aware and present and lucid, and the two Lunas were just as real as I was. I spoke to them, I engaged them, and they manipulated my surroundings in a way that I should not experience beyond the realm of dreams. That’s all I know. I haven’t seen them since. Now, every strange thing that happens in my sleep will, at the very least, not be as bad as the night the other Lunas visited me. 

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Dear Dorothy



Dear Dorothy,

I remember that you scorn all things handwritten – you type everything, I remember, even though your handwriting is lovely and straight, like white picket fences, birthday candles, and pushpins on the corkboard above your bed – but perhaps you will find some empathy within you to read this. I can imagine you now, wherever you are, reading this, perhaps at your desk, or perhaps at a cafĂ© at your lunch break. Perhaps you have a cup of coffee – it looks black because it fits your personality, but I know you put three teaspoons of sugar inside it, I know that about you – and perhaps you are pulling a cigarette out of the slim silver case from your handbag. I see you exhaling the smoke in a long, lazy cloud. You used to blow it into my face, and you would toss your head back, laughing, when my eyes began tearing up. I coughed, you didn’t. I remember that about you.

I remember many things about you. Your name was Dorota officially, on your letterheads, followed by your degree, your department, and the name of our university. Dorota was serious and grim, who, standing at six feet could look down at professors with her fierce black eyes lined like a cat’s, and you were Dolly to fools who thought they could control a wild thing like you, and because I knew better, you were Dorothy. You were Dorothy to everyone, and I am no exception. You, Dorothy with the formidable surname, a jumble of eastern European syllables impossible to say, intimidating in typeface, of wild beauty when dragged out in ink by your hand.


I remember you in fits and bursts, Dorothy, glimpses of you in the throngs on the plaza, dark colors, exquisite hair, lips marked with a poisonous red. I still look for you in the crowds, and sometimes I see you thrown to pieces and scattered amongst strangers, your smart black shoes, your swift and purposeful walk, your haughty bark of laughter. I remember the smell of your perfume – you puffed it onto me once to see if I could be dangerous and elegant like you, it didn’t work – but nobody wears it like you do, Dorothy.

I remember the first time I saw you. It was September and it was warm, and you were lounging on the glade, shoes flung aside, book in your lap, cigarette between your fingers. I sketched you in red colored pencil. You didn’t know this at the time, didn’t see me because I was an insignificant speck of an individual, but I was shaking with anxiety. When I told this to you, you laughed at me, of course.
I had amassed an embarrassing amount of sketches of you, Dorothy, by the time we met. Do you remember that windy April morning? The wind carried my sketches your way, and you collected them, handed them back to me, and teased me because I was one of your many admirers. Somehow, I dared to ask if I could paint you, and perhaps because you indulged every opportunity to be worshipped, you took me to your lair.

Dorothy, you swallowed me whole. You picked me up by your fingertips and dropped me down your gullet. I was lost the moment I crossed the threshold, into your house, the sacred box, a too-small cave for a dragon queen, draped with deep reds and hung with neat photographs of enchanting places familiar to you, arcane to me. This is the chamber of Dorothy, but you laughed and dug your elbow into the pillow and peered at me with your venom eyes.

I recall it was during a hot spell in the spring, and the window was cracked open, and only for you. You didn’t offer me a drink or anything, and you, you could fan yourself with my sketches if you liked, and slip out of your costume to reveal armor and naked skin, scales of a terrible, beautiful beast that I could not hope to comprehend. I felt silly even taking off my scarf, and so I suffered there in your room, breathing in the heady, nauseatingly powerful odors of flowers plucked from the side of the mechanical engineering building smudged along every surface. Dead flowers swooning in the corner, wilted and browned, still belching their fragrance – and I was growing faint and you laughed as you put your clothes back on.

When I close my eyes I perceive you – a tall, dark woman with a quick, straight gait, loping across campus with books under one arm, a cigarette wedged between oxblood lips. I can paint you with a few quick strokes of India ink and have it recognizable, Dorothy, but it isn’t you. I’ve tried. I’ve created you in ink and paint and charcoal, worked your dark lipstick into the paper and canvas, sometimes smudged along with my ring finger, other times straight from the bullet, dangerous and bold like you were. I picked the flowers, redolent and pressed them against your image – smutty, slutty fragrance, lacking in elegance, inadequate to describe you.

Dear Dorothy, these are for you. Sketches, all, but fitting of the brevity of our acquaintance—and you don’t think much of art, anyways. I was too frightened – and still, I am frightened – to say you were my muse, but you were, you who scorned art and love and beauty, frivolities and pointless indulgences. I remember this about you. You, who had an engine in place of a soul, as you told me one time when I tried to read you poetry – I remember this about you.

And when I told you that I loved you, you laughed in my face. I, scarcely past girlhood, an artist(you said this derisively, you were derisive of art in general) of feeble talent and creativity, no use to a civilization that marches towards the future – how dare I court you? You told me you had no need for desperate warrior artists, and would not care to read whatever lovelorn drivel I sent your way, if it was anything like how I behaved. I remember this about you.

And because I remember this about you, I can feel safe that you will never read these words or look at these sketches. The envelope may smell like the flowers – gardenias, I looked them up – but you are Dorothy, Dorota ascended to meet the new America, the new woman resplendent and powerful, and you will have forgotten me. You will not read this, and this realization comes with relief and not despair, dear Dorothy, I know this about me, because you have taught me to be this way, I know this.

I still bear the scars your claws, your fangs, your dark kisses adorned me with. Your dragon fire scorched me from head to toe, blackened and burned me until I was not me, not a person any longer, but your prey and your possession, yours to destroy and to create in an image that pleased your passing fancy. You ravaged me and you forged me and you left me.

You will have forgotten me, but I remember you, Dorothy. I loved you, I loved you, I loved you, and I wish you well.

Love,

An admirer


Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Serpent Imagery and Symbolism - Lura Nancy Pedrini, Duilio T. Pedrini (1966)


"Whether the serpent is the 'founder of Romanticism' is questionable, but nevertheless it is an interesting suggestion. Little research is required...to discover the profound influence the serpent has had on the thoughts and literature of all people since the beginning of time. At times, the snake is regarded as sacred, at other times profane, or sometimes as an object evoking both reverence and hatred, but the snake is rarely considered just an ordinary animal pursuing its own way of existence with no significance for man...The Romanticists were fascinated by the serpent and were interested in its symbolic and imaginative value." - Pedrini, Pedrini (1966)

As probably none of you know, one of my greatest prose projects - several works of varying lengths and at varying stages of completeness and/or development - is a project I fondly refer to as Serpents. In preparation for my efforts in actually putting some ideas down to paper, I've begun to do some more reading. I hope to compile a sort of annotated bibliography for it onto this blog.



The first book is Serpent Imagery and Symbolism by Drs. Lura Nancy Pedrini and Duilio T. Pedrini of Princeton University. It is almost precisely what it says on its cover with the small exception that...

...the cover neglects to mention that the entire book is about serpent imagery and symbolism precisely in the works of Romantic poets and only Romantic poets.

This is not exactly what I was looking for. Also, not being a huge poetry buff, I was less engaged than I had hoped to be while reading a book entirely about serpents.

As I'm not well-educated on the ways of reading books about...reading poetry...I won't attempt to write a great deal of critique or anything that resembles a review. This isn't my aim. I'm working on a project that will inevitably have a great deal of serpent imagery and symbolism, so what's said in this book, while I'm not a Romantic and don't want to be one, is still useful.

The table of contents does a fair job at delineating what, exactly, this book is about. The title will be followed either with a representative quote from that section, or a remark from yours truly. My remarks are in italics. Here it is:

I. Symbolism and Romanticism - this first chapter serves to establish the significance of the symbol as a conduit between the spiritual/intangible world and the physical/tangible world. This is especially important as Romanticism seemed, at least to me, to be a reactionary expression of dramatic and powerful imagination and creativity and emotion against scientific rationality and empiricism...or something similar.

II. The Serpent and Romanticism - "No literary movement has lent itself to a greater expression of symbolism than Romanticism; no animal has lent itself to more symbolical interpretation than the serpent..." (26)

III. Serpent Imagery in the Major Romantics - chapter III subdivides serpent imagery into six sectors, then analyzes examples from poets William Blake, William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, Percy Shelley, and John Keats (always in that order) for each of these categories.

  1. Man's emotions
  2. Man's physical and mental attributes
  3. The whole man
  4. Areas and aspects of Man's life and experiences
  5. Natural phenomena and man-made objects
  6. Pictorial detail
These sectors overlap and since I'm not well-versed (get it?) in the source material, I'll let the following quotes help me out:

"The serpent images of the first five classifications are generally expressed in metaphors and similes. The last classification does not use the serpent for comparison but only for a description of a phenomenalistic world." (38)

"...images are analyzed in light of what they state, not what they imply." (39) - Imagery conveys obvious meaning while symbolism conveys latent meaning.

IV. Serpent Symbolism in the Major Romantics - chapter IV strays from the format of III where each category is discussed in that precise order of poets. Some of them don't have examples in all categories. The categories in IV are subdivided and themselves progress from positive symbolism of serpents to negative.
  1. Idealism
    1. Imagination
    2. Benevolence
    3. Pantheism
  2. The Fall of Man
    1. Serpent as beguiler
    2. Woman as serpent-beguiler
  3. Materialism
    1. Analytic reason
    2. Empiricism
    3. Sensuousness
  4. Man against Man
    1. Enmity
    2. Literary criticism
  5. Institutions against Man
    1. Kings and kingcraft
    2. Priests and priestcraft
"The reader, then, is permitted to see the Romanticists' view of a world deteriorating from a perfect, idealistic condition of love, innocence, and harmony to an imperfect, materialistic condition of hatred, guilt, and discord." (75) - Astute readers of The Smiling Spider (or of Tolkien or of Norse mythology or of ANYTHING about serpents besides Romantic poetry) will recognize that this link between serpents and materialism, the physical world, etc is very obvious, especially with the strong association of serpents with mineral wealth (GOLD! Dragons hoard GOLD! Serpents are, by nature, voraciously greedy.)

"No animal has lent itself to more symbolical interpretation than the serpent." (75) - I feel as if this exact sentence was used earlier on in the book (it was) but that the serpent is used to symbolize both extremes is a testament to its versatility and its great symbolic value.

Summary and Conclusions - the bulk of this slim book was systematic analysis of the works of Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, and Keats in the previously delineated categories. But, at the end, there is a bottom line:

"Literature and art, in general, are abundant in symbols because the creative man is aware of the conflict between conscious and unconscious forces." (135) - well...obviously. To go even further, symbols reconcile conscious and unconscious, tangible and intangible, etc...

"...[symbols] probe the unconscious and give to themselves and the world a better meaning of life." (136)

But the real, real bottom line:

"Whether the serpent is the 'founder of Romanticism' is questionable, but nevertheless it is an interesting suggestion. Little research is required...to discover the profound influence the serpent has had on the thoughts and literature of all people since the beginning of time. At times, the snake is regarded as sacred, at other times profane, or sometimes as an object evoking both reverence and hatred, but the snake is rarely considered just an ordinary animal pursuing its own way of existence with no significance for man...The Romanticists were fascinated by the serpent and were interested in its symbolic and imaginative value."