Sinbad’s sea-battered ship was poised on the edge of annihilation, The Sultan's brow furrowed with curiosity, then without warning Scheherazade stilled her narrative and lived to see the morning sun.
When the moon and stars next owned the sky, Sinbad was snatched from the jaws of death then the saga of Prince Kalandar seized the king's soul with wonder but Scheherazade left the tale unfinished and sang with the birds at dawn.
Rimsky-Korsakoff turned the pages at his desk - consumed by Scheherazade’s charms then etched his pen across the waiting staves: The violin must weave her spell once more and bassoon and oboe take the prince’s part.
Trombone and trumpet led the martial call and all the rest enlisted for the cause. Russian bravura fused with the seductive allure of exotic tunes born of the dust on the silken road.
A sonic whirlwind filled Saint Paul Church, as winds and tremolos grew to cyclonic force. A wall of brass completed Kalandar’s tale. capped by an exuberant clash of cymbal plates.
The silence yielded to tender violins chanting a hymn to the princess in all her grace. Tambourine and winds wove a tapestry of her debonaire and most virtuous prince.
As the final pizzicato chord faded, the Sultan turned to Scheherazade with tear-filled eyes and beheld his immortal princess and she her valiant and eternal prince and so it would be as long as night preceded dawn.
She kissed away his tears of joy and whispered in his ear, “My beloved husband, I will tell you stories forever. Tomorrow you shall learn of the Feast at Baghdad.”
Another site I have posted on, Poetfreak.com is shutting down so I am moving some the poems here. More refugees will follow.