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I walk along a path I do not know But falter left nor right, And, welcoming the light Of birches, still and white As sleeping snow, A raven, coat that shimmers Soft as coal, Beside me flutters square And, drawn like to a snare, Alights upon the air As on a knoll. A ripened chestnut, trapped Within his maw And hard as ancient ice, Is tightened by the vise And shatters at the slicing Of his jaw To crumble into dust, Which quick cascades And settles, as it slows, To carefully compose The shape of raven toes Where he parades. The raven flies ahead And, with a stamp, His talons take a grip Atop a wooden tip Of birches, dead and stripped To form a ramp. I stumble after, fixed Through field of black As in a telescope, And, clawing at the slope, I climb it with a hope To touch his back And ****** a hand ahead Just as he slumps, Both limp but stiff, to lie Upon his side and die. I meet his cloudy eye Upon the stump, Then lift my head to find A willow sprig, A tendril hanging free For me to grip. Indeed, I climb the strip of tree, The little twig, And swivel in the air, As if by choice. I hear a humming, low, Resounding from below— The raven’s eyes, aglow With Odin’s voice. Like lightbulbs flicker, dim with yellow light, They sharpen with the tones That bellow from his bones— This god and poet moans His heavy spite: He damns me to the lifetime of a bird. My sin, I do not know But bear the bitter woe And close my eyes to focus On this word: Saṃsāra. So I feel my Senses spill Upon the ground And flood out all around And swallow every sound Till all is still.
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Feb 26, 2014
Feb 26, 2014 at 5:50 PM UTC
Raven Odin Dream
I walk along a path I do not know But falter left nor right, And, welcoming the light Of birches, still and white As sleeping snow, A raven, coat that shimmers Soft as coal, Beside me flutters square And, drawn like to a snare, Alights upon the air As on a knoll. A ripened chestnut, trapped Within his maw And hard as ancient ice, Is tightened by the vise And shatters at the slicing Of his jaw To crumble into dust, Which quick cascades And settles, as it slows, To carefully compose The shape of raven toes Where he parades. The raven flies ahead And, with a stamp, His talons take a grip Atop a wooden tip Of birches, dead and stripped To form a ramp. I stumble after, fixed Through field of black As in a telescope, And, clawing at the slope, I climb it with a hope To touch his back And ****** a hand ahead Just as he slumps, Both limp but stiff, to lie Upon his side and die. I meet his cloudy eye Upon the stump, Then lift my head to find A willow sprig, A tendril hanging free For me to grip. Indeed, I climb the strip of tree, The little twig, And swivel in the air, As if by choice. I hear a humming, low, Resounding from below— The raven’s eyes, aglow With Odin’s voice. Like lightbulbs flicker, dim with yellow light, They sharpen with the tones That bellow from his bones— This god and poet moans His heavy spite: He damns me to the lifetime of a bird. My sin, I do not know But bear the bitter woe And close my eyes to focus On this word: Saṃsāra. So I feel my Senses spill Upon the ground And flood out all around And swallow every sound Till all is still.
For Ragnarok. A dream I actually had.
edwardalan
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Feb 26, 2014
Feb 26, 2014 at 5:50 PM UTC
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