Susan Culver - And Then, She Opens Her Eyes |
"Is it you, my prince?" said she to him. "You have waited a long while." -- Sleeping Beauty
We have not yet reached the ocean, not felt salt burrowing in the creases of clasped palms or shivered whispers spraying our flesh like secrets. I am tugged by you, by wind, urging me closer to promise, benediction.
We are still moving through forests, dropping off faces of rocks like tears, like wedding rice. I am tossing through waves of fear, frayed hems, skin-scrapes. The clasp of my suitcase has come undone, history is scattered. Hurry, you say.
We keep covering the same ground, again, always waiting for the symphony, the ballet. You tell me this is sunrise, an unblemished page. I am turning in tales of lost things, longing to hold tight to old treasures. Still you are pulling me forward.
We lose record of time, instants are eternal gateways between was and will be, a break in the trees. You reach the end an instant before me. I am tangled in roots, wrapped still in night. You are morning: transcendence, light. Stirring, you are stirring me
from a hundred years' sleep with kisses, and the sea.
Susan Culver lives in Colorado and is the editor of Lily (http://freewebs.com/lilylitreview). She has had work published in Paumonok Review, Rose & Thorn, and Wicked Alice.
|
|
|
|