You have betrayed me, Eros.
You have sent me
my true love.
- Louise Gluck, "The Reproach"
Waning, trembling, loss of breath: the first signs of the permanence that will become the end of this story.
Picture woodland, Dear Reader, imagine trees with whorled roots, and leaning branches; picture sunlight and comforting shade; picture the occasional brook, silver rivulets crossing brown earth and clusters of green grass; the sky must be a blinding blue, for it cannot be otherwise, the mind will always insist on blueness; let the breeze be a delicious balm--in the beginning, at least. Isn't this how most stories start, after all?
Or imagine the city, if you will, the city with its absent stillness. I prefer the woods, but do what you must.
STICK TO THE STORY. A reprimand. There should always be a reprimand.
The mind is where the chase leads; the mind is where the chase is, and I begin:
The shadows lengthen as the day loses ground. Two shadows, they were, and one of them was faceless.
MIND YOUR TENSES.
At the body's swiftest, the limbs persevere, and the mind endures. Soon, twilight, herald of night. Soon, the wind; soon, the truth. YOU ARE GETTING AHEAD OF YOURSELF. But it is a race, is it not?
IT IS A CHASE.
I erase a word and replace it with the same word and think that I am discovering newness. It is a form of madness. I look out the window and see a small, round moon. I think it is more yellow than white, but then I change my mind.
One shadow fleeing from the faceless one, from the impermanent one, he whose being is always a makeshift one. I come up with a list of adjectives: transient, shifting, short-lived, they. They is not an adjective. Impermanent, then.
And that was why I ran. An epiphany.
WHO IS THE SPEAKER HERE? A reprimand.
The other shadow, breaking, then, turning into someone else, breaks again.
Daphne, dazzled by a slice of brilliance, finds herself turning--
That was not in the outline. That sentence pushed its way from below, from somewhere unseen. That sentence was an insistence I did not foresee. It begs to be italicized, but I would rather look the other way. It was I, after all, who was dazzled, it was I who turned; it was I who mistook that slice of brilliance for light. There is no outline.
WHO IS THE SPEAKER HERE? There should always be a reprimand.
It never ends. I cannot have you follow me this way.
WHO IS THE You HERE? But must there always be a reprimand?
I have (finally, finally) taken the great myth and torn it apart.
1 comment:
only way you can say it
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