Sunday, February 20, 2011

from The White Bear, a long narrative poem linked to the Scandinavian fairy tale "East of the Sun and West of the Moon." Portions of the poem have appeared in the Green Mountains Review.

Dawn Potter


She has forgotten the room, forgotten the firelight, forgotten

the cool ironed sham beneath her cheek,

forgotten the shadows under the bed, forgotten the wind at the window,

the stars burning, an owl snatching a wayward rabbit,

the rabbit’s shriek; she has forgotten her mother, her father,

her cottage under moonlight; forgotten the rain,

forgotten the brook that wept like a river.

Only now only now only now.

For dreaming and the act of love are mirrors;

and tonight the girl knows also; but where is her breath,

where is the tender shivering flesh below the ridge of her shoulder?


Where? For she has lost herself, she has lost the white bear,

who is not a bear, but what has he become?

What has she become? Both have cast off their skins, both

grown larger than giants, and each new and solitary cell

undergoes its ruthless joy. Who is the bear, who the woman;

who the air, who the fire; who the knife,

who the wound? How terrible they are;

how near to hate and dreaming is love,

its fury of nail and claw; and how time

narrows and slows, till now there is only

yes and no and yes.

2 comments:

Jenne' R. Andrews said...

",,, How terrible they are;

how near to hate and dreaming is love,


its fury of nail and claw; and how time

narrows and slows, till now there is only


yes and no and yes."

breathtaking lines that stop the moon's descent for me tonight.
xxj

Dawn Potter said...

Thanks, Jen: that means a lot.