Madame Curie and Terry Shibo Meets Jack Kevorkian
They told me today I have a brain tumor, small
they said, and not malignant. In my dream of Terry Shibo,
a redneck walks through her room with his rifle and hunting dogs.
A small brown bird flutters in the small brown grass. Its heart
falls out in my hand. But no, it's the telephone
spewing words. Brain tumor. The bird lifts
from the grass—brain tumor—and flying low, disappears
into an ocean of grass. One little brown bird.
The hunter shoots anything the moves, but Terry Shibo
doesn't move. The grass doesn't move
around her. I search the swamp and hemlocks for a stump
or log, a place to sit. No one asked me if I was sitting
when they said, brain tumor. Once, Dante called to read me a poem.
In my dream of Terry Shibo, the sun hangs orange
in the cage of her ribs and sings like Maya Angelou.
I was on my way out the door. Are you sitting down?
Dante asked. I sat. I sat for seven hours, his words echoing
in my head. I am Beatrice he said. I am Narcissus and you my pool,
my mirror. I am Dante, he said, and you
are the seven layers of hell.
A woodpecker hammers a tree, drums
and drums. Today, no one asked me if I was sitting,
They let me stand, staring, while they said, brain tumor.
In my dream of Terry Shribo, bees have made
honey in her skull. Loud in the swamp around me,
peepers sing. A woodpecker hammers. Her brain is honeycomb,
honey seeps onto her tongue. In all that darkness
something sweet. Or the memory of something sweet. Hazy
in the hemlocks, the sun sinks. I think about morphine, about making a will.
About surgery and radiation. Around me, the woods darken. Geese fly over.
Or the memory of nothing at all. In my dream of Terry Shibo, her eyes flicker
and open. In those blank pools, she sees the sun sizzling into the ocean.
A geyser of steam erupts in the newborn darkness.
Around me, trees are dreaming themselves a forest.
There's a hole in their dream where I sit.
Mary Stebbins 060401a, 060330a
--
I am certain of nothing but the Heart's affections and the truth of the Imagination- John Keats
Mary
5 comments:
those are beautiful words fitted neatly together about your terrible news! Kick that tumor out of there, by the sound of your bio, you have the power ;) -- my good thoughts are with you Kim
Mary--
This is an absolutely beautiful, powerful, moving poem. You are a shaman.
Pat
Thank you Kim and Pat for your kind words. Mary :-D
Beautiful. Apaisant as we say in French, even if the circumstances are not.
Un sourire de La Butte aux Cailles. Take care.
Thank you again and again, Viking, for your very kind comments! You are sweet.
Merci! Merci beaucoups!
Un sourire pour vous!
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