The Fall
Dawn Potter
The Fiend thought of the Stairs as a sort of emergency ladder
descending from the firmament like Rapunzel’s braid,
mysterious and glittering, and only occasionally useful
(since God yanked them up as the spirit moved him),
though when operational they worked more or less
like an escalator, sweeping swarms of pintucked angels
grandly into the celestial ballroom, for who would expect
angels to climb hand over hand up a hairy ladder,
panting and sweating like ordinary princes?
At the marge of the Stairs lapped an opalescent sea,
a gulf of liquid pearl, each wave as sluggish as polenta
on the boil, and over it sailed alabaster barges weighed down
with seraphim on tour, though, as he might have expected,
no one waved when he coasted by. For some reason
God had let down the Stairs that day, whether to dare
his enemy to easy ascent or to aggravate his sad exclusion
from the party, who could tell? But as it happened,
the Fiend had other fish to fry.
For the Stairs descended, through a film of sea,
to that playhouse of angels, Earth, toy paradise of trees
and fruit and docile tigers, patient as sleep beneath the slow
ocean ripple; and the Fiend, folding his wings and halting
at the fulcrum of the golden Stairs scaling both Heaven and Earth,
looked with wonder at the sudden view of all this world,
like a climber who bursts from a gnarled, branchy darkness
to find, at one instant, the map of the forest spread before him—
a feast of lakes, rivers, sun-struck glades—and above him
the sky, the sky, the sky! And at sight of such beauty,
the Fiend was seized by joy and discontent, heartrending
in near equal portion, and was stymied for a moment
from his purpose, despite his malice, lingering to scrutinize
the canopy of shade and light, until, with some reluctance,
he shook out his heavy wings and leaped down
through the slow-running sea, down the broad Stairs
toward Earth, falling like Alice through the pure air, past star
after star, bright island worlds, though he never paused
to ask who dwelt there in such happy ignorance.
4 comments:
This is stunningly beautiful. I feel like I am floating in that slow moving sea.
Thank you so much, Louise. This is so kind of you--
There is so much power, joy in language, vision, love of the universe in this including empathy for the Fiend in all of us-- a poem I and certainly others would say they wish they could write or had written.I can see why your star is rising: a good and just thing. The sky is the limit for you, Dawn. xj
I've been struggling hard this week not to lose heart, and I am grateful for these sweet remarks. Thank you.
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