Eden


Eden

 

Every artist dips her brush in her own soul, and paints her own nature into her pictures.

~Henry Ward Beecher

 

The sunrise had just stretched out to the fine tip of the horizon, the pink of the sky complementing the reds of the apples that were across the Lilith’s cottage. She was looking out the skies and pondered. Meanwhile, inside, a fainting ringing was heard by her aged ears, disrupting her visions of insomnia. She picked up the phone, only to be informed her granddaughter’s body had just been found.

 

Before the following catastrophic swerves of motions and feelings were to occur on Lilith’s fragile spirit, she was viewing the great harmony of nature’s silence with the stars and heavens above.

The beauty that had been lashed from the solace of darkness night after night. It was the third day since they had filed a missing report for Christina. Unable to sleep, her porch seemed to embrace her more than ever, where she inclined to worry her poor heart for countless hours on end. Feeble and purpled skin hanged beneath her wet eyes, bloodshot and streaked with red.

 

She looked up,

Feeling betrayed…

 

“Mama..”

 

She glanced at the phone, losing herself in another meaningless train of thought.

 

“Mama, the found the body..”

 

She heard the other line of the phone whisper out to her. It made her angry, making her apple coloured blood boil deep inside her. Hearing her daughter’s voice only made her more frustrated and upset. She was barely able to contain herself by now.

 

“The funeral is on Sunday, Mama..”

 

She looked out now, to the burning field across her cottage. The fierce red. now had the backdrop of a magnificent dark blue forenoon sky. The morning was mocking her sadness. She scratched her cheek at the irritation of a tear running down her cheek Not noticing the phone was now trembling violently in her splotched hand.

 

“Are you inviting her?” The elderly woman heard faintly in the background, said by a masculine voice. She festered a moment with the phone. “Ma-

 

With a cry that echoed with an inhuman quality through her small kitchen, Lilith felt the phone slip from her grasp. The device smashed on the tile flooring. Lilith howled. She swore with abandon while causing a wild flourish of fury and chaos through-out her small cottage.

 

Her rampage may have lasted long into the afternoon, but for a glimpse of the garden through the veil of lacy curtains draped over one kitchen window. All at once overcome with a different sort of hysteria, Lilith’s tiny, splotched legs raced the rest of her skinny frame up two flights of stairs, where she collapsed on the splintered wooden floor of the attic, gasping musty, stale air through her lungs. Her throat pulsed sorely as a result of her tantrum. She wheezed on dust and cigarette smoke.

Around her body, the fruits of forty years of labor sprawled across the grimy attic in a haphazard array of colors and hues such that were rarely displayed in any art museum. The canvasses, the evidence of her life’s work, had been arranged with care on whichever surfaces might hold them; the floor, the window seat, an ornate desk that stood on three legs in the corner. She refused to hang them on the walls, believing that they would only collect dust and that she would be afraid to touch them if they were suspended on silver pegs in neat little, finished packages. More often than not she would dabble with a painting long after she had deemed it complete, flicking a dash of color where it was necessary or re-doing a nose or an eye that hadn’t emerged from her brush strokes in quite the style she had envisioned.

A lover from many years ago, whom Lilith now recalled with a certain detached sorrow, was the only other person to ever have entered this domain. It proved her first and only experience with such companionship, and she grew so comfortable with their honeymoon routine that one day she dared to lead him up the stairs by the hand and display for him the recesses of her murky attic studio. She remembered that he did not speak for a long while, but stared, dumbfounded, at the slashes of red over gray, open-mouthed faces that had the blackest of voids. Swirls of silvers on blues that mirrored a midnight sky, as if from a dream, Lilith herself did not know the origin of such images, only that her hand had been the tool by which they were brought to life. “Very…haunting” her lover had managed to stutter ambiguously. When he left that afternoon, it was for good.

Her granddaughter, Christina, the eight-year-old angel. Whose uncut locks trickled in gold curls down impish shoulders, had been forbidden entry to the attic gloom. A determined Lilith had undermined every attempt executed by her child to penetrate the world beyond the attic stairs, toward the stars, horrified by the thought that the infection festering there would taint the ingenuous eyes of the little girl, like mud might a clear river on a blue day. Even before that, her daughter had faced the same restrictions, until the allure of the attic to those nearest Lilith’s heart manifested into an unquenchable desire to understand what lay on the other side of the door at the top of the stairs.

 

“The funeral is on Sunday, Mama..”

 

“The funeral is on Sunday.”

 

Sobbing inexorably, by some miracle Lilith located her supplies through a blur of tears. She took up the familiar staff, stroking the tip of coarse hair as if to test it for its breaking point. The abrasive surface rolled over itself beneath the crook of her thumb and index finger. She licked it, experimentally. The worn bristles tasted of old paint. Many years ago, Lilith had made a great occasion of replacing her used brushes. Recently, she’d abandoned those newer tools in favor of old brushes her hand recognized without seeing.

Some dated as far back as when she still believed in immortality.

 

Agony was the barely adequate word that described the tight ache in Lilith’s chest as she clenched the paintbrush. The pain had nothing to do with the asthma that plagued her on damp nights or the throbbing of her joints in the morning. There was no scientific reason behind it, no pill a doctor could prescribe akin to the acclaimed cures that temporarily relieved the symptoms of old age. There was only this moment, with this stick to orchestrate the revelation of a pact as old as humankind. Arms, marked by cherry blemishes that served as a reminder of the years in her life, guided the brush with certainty and strength, even though it hurt and the color of her tears manifested themselves on the canvas in streaks of gray. But this display of quiet sorrow, concealed behind pallid tears, would not suffice the rage heaving in her chest and so imaginary flames crackled and spit smoldering embers upon the unadorned earth, plowing through a field of apples with such vivacity that they could not be quenched by the river of tears. A figure emerged beneath her eyelids, a pale form that danced in a swirl of gold and summer rain, its face turned up to the sky and dispelling the onslaught of ash that cascaded down from the murky heavens. Breathing strongly through her nose, the scent of paint and apples mingling to create a sharp musk that spurred her onward, Lilith forgot to pause, forgot to look at what she was doing. Her hand knew, her body understood, and so her filmy eyes had no use for failing vision.

The pace of her motions increased. Her entire body pushed into the brush, conducting it in sweeps of unstoppable force. She could feel the pulse of her heartbeat rising through her veins and pounding in her blood until she was deaf, as well as blind. The power of her body was never repressed by these frailties, never paused once. She didn’t need sight to see the colors flashing through her mind in the sweet bursts of fire and waterfalls. She didn’t need to hear for her dead granddaughter’s voice to wash the attic in a sprinkle of bells and light.

All the while, the culmination of sixty-nine years of color upon canvas became understanding, and with it the pain in her heart intensified ,(that petty organ), the chain that rattled with the bindings of the Earth. It was beating faster and faster until she could not keep up with it any longer. She could not see her hand. However, in her mind’s eye, she saw what had happened, and she knew it was her own fault, by her own hand. She saw a girl and a garden of burning apples. Bits of white light sparked came as she bit into them. Before her eyes, the film over her irises parted. Everything became so clear to her just before she fell.

Just before she flew.


Shallow Bays Walk Behind


Doth seven trees a copse make?

Doth seven trees a copse make?

I.

 

Trees swift and sway about without my help,

And alas. Fortnight ‘pon fortnight,

I near not glance.

(Beings never do)

Doth the wind fault on me?

Remorselessly so-

In a field of antiquity in rows-

That pales beneath a stroke of time.

As we both now,

(You and I)

whirl,

backwards.

 

II.


And when Autumn breaks its final fall

Doth these trees savor thine call?

-Catch me now -When I sing-

-To reflect these small mirror’d things

That in the sky show their beaut

As deaf becomes the player’s lute

(I glance now at you,

With songs stuck inside your hair.)

 

III.

 

And now I rest,

For some time.

Before the trench,

Fills it’s vines,

With myself.

‘Pon it’s knees,

Before we find,

A sanctity,

For your love,

and your hate,

That climbs above,

And hits stars straight.

As we flutter with them

(You and I)

To hear Kingdom come

As they swerve you nigh.



Become less apt- Strike Unfast


IBM CIO Report: Key Findings

An unlove

-That bewilders me

Yet you feel upon the rest

-Of this world

Stop such suddening hordes!

Let go! -

Of foolish sense

Deceive me no longer! -

Lie to thoust self no more!


Stammer at Me


And Thou Shalt Trust... the Seer

And miss-see

These gifts o’ love

I give to thee

Yet you nay speak

Art thou lost?

Painful sights

At e’en beggars cost

The mind o’ parish

I give unto thou


The King and the Pauper


Illustrations de The Prince and The Pauper, 1882.

(My first attempt at longer poetry, written sometime in August)

 

I.

A merry tune shalt I converse

Since pass through me this verse:

Spreading out among field’s glee

Sits a tower – Majest ‘nd tall

That throughout the lands enthralls

But lay inside be the dim King

Who asked for a song that one may sing

So forth was brought

By force

A woeful beggar

That knew many tunes. –

But the poor man nay sang

And no flower’s bloomed,

To the dense that gloom.

O’er the elder man’s mind

A fight against dull divine!

And so this be the tale

Of poor against

Law that sits above.

 

II.

The provoked King!

Merry and gay-

Asks the poor man the tales he bring,

I come bearing gifts o’ silver ‘nd gold!

Words upon words untold!”

Let me hear upon such remarks!”

Indeed I have epics to hear”

I wish to hear them in times near!

Nay, thou cannot hark”

 

III.

Beast! How dare thou disobey! –

Art thou fool enough to become prey?”

Fathom not! – I hear no threat,

For no deed doth I regret!

Let upon my body

Ravenous birds feast-

And let them dine ’till Sun goes east

For they cannot eat my wordful mind!”

Such spirit–

This have-not own!

Awestruck am I – Upon my throne!

But still I laugh –

Art thou so unwise?

This lyric you utter

I greatly despise!”

Anger me no more

Leave me be!

For wordings nay you pour

What use is thou to me?”

 

IV.

Calm now beast–

I can no longer wait!

To hear the hinges–

O’ Heaven’s gate!

Strike now, O harsh King!

So no longer are days of add-

For if such doings are not bring’d

Tumble shall my health! I go forth mad!”

 

V.

I bumble upon thee? -

Did my speech fault

I care not for your mind’s halt!

With nature shall the madman intertwine!

As he go forth deaf and blind!”


Arrant my Solemn Grace


Grace was said before the barbeque was served ...

Lea’e me be in endless space

Endowed by this cage

A circumference

That holds me from you

The pedestal o’ my bosom

Holds true the words that sly

Lacking o’ a form

Wondering if it is able


The Broken Words


That lay upon –

This cold cement.

Lashing dusk,

A cold wind starts,

Howling like the wolves,

Hungry.

Waiting for you.


Café do Brasil


Brazilian coffee sacks.

Uno. Dos.

The side of my head,

Bangs and clashes with the smell,

Of coffee stains on my suit that bled,

Red ink onto my white sheets,

I wished to sleep on the following night,

With a woman that passed me by a moment ago,

I feel in love with her at a single sight,

But she left with a Latte and so,

I was not able to follow her,

But my head could not let her face go,

And my thoughts began to slur,

As I tried to walk to my seat,

To sit and calm myself,

But I slipped and felt the heat,

Of a Mocha below my belt.

 


Brilliant Behind the Light


We Eat Light
Float and flutter by my side.

Somberness-
desirous underneath the seems…
Beware! The thought will die;
…Dark and mournful slowly gleams-
-above the earth.
We stretch numb inspirations
upon the pure.
Oh God! The wickedness continues…

We witness black rabbits along the fog
Oh God! The unsightly prey
Sacred seeking-
Where is our luminosity?

In whose eyes-
is there witness?
Bequeath his dwellings-
all through his life
No-
words-
left.


Heavy Before the Wind


Strangely viscid
-below the clouds.
We lurk our young
-within the shadows.
Night vanishes
-as daemons scatter.
So murky behind the fire
-they elude endlessly.
You entice those who betray
-an icon of the flock.
For reach alone cannot save
-

a devil left behind.

Hey Teachers leave the Kids alone

Where red poppies grow.

You breed our iniquities
-where is penalty?
Alas life shall leave
-smother your hope.
Out of control
-a broken promise.
How many times
-must they see.
My likeness
-lacking inability
Look for love
-misfortune is wealth
And find a lad
-talking to only himself


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