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Mistaking The Sea For Green Fields — by Ashley Capps

- by Ashley Capps Ophelia, when she died, lay in the water like the river’s bride, all pale and stark and beautiful against the somber rocks, her hair an endless golden ceremony. She made the water sing for her; it flowed over her folded arms. Not so my father’s sister Karen, swollen in a day-old tub of water when they found her, needle tucked into the fold of her arm, her last thing: a wing. So everything went as nameless as the men who lifted her naked from the tub, or those who rolled her into the mouth of the furnace, which is what you get when you don’t get a service, when your mother’s years of grief turn last to rage: I won’t pay for it. Leave me out of it. And even though they finally said it wasn’t suicide; a mistake— no one knew what to do with all of that anger, or in the end how not to blame her. Even now, in her unmarked container. * People once believed a deeper reason, some dark secret motivation to the way the lemmings threw themselves en masse into the sea. Were they weary of their lives; could they, too, despair? Or like those second-vessel swine when Jesus exorcised two babbling men of their demons, driving the demons through a pack of bewildered hogs— the way they plunged? The truth we know now: they leave when food is scarce, when they’ve grown too many; believe the roads they follow lead to new meadows, a place to start over. I think of Karen, feeding and feeding her veins, how it is possible she saw us all suddenly there—miraculous and festive on some bright and other shore, like the life she had been swimming toward all along, trying to get right. Like those sailors long ago, that tropical disease, calenture— when, far from everything they knew, men grew sometimes delirious and mistook the waving sea for green fields. Rejoicing, they leapt overboard, and so were lost forever, even though they thought it was real, though they thought they were going home. —by Ashley Capps
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XNtricity
Published
Oct 20, 2012
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