Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
judy smith Nov 2015
In June this year, designer Masaba Gupta and film producer Madhu Mantena had the quietest of civil ceremonies. It was only when she took to Twitter the next day to talk about the court registry that most people heard of it. It was a move most unorthodox, for a leading fashion designer, especially one who counts several Bollywood actors among her close friends.

At the time, she also announced “a Caribbean wedding in November”.

The destination wedding isn’t happening. But that’s not to deprive us of a grand, four-day affair, the sort that has the most coveted guest list, and is followed with the keenest interest. It will start on November 19, with the bridal showers, will continue with the mehendi on November 20, the sangeet on November 21 and a gala reception on Sunday, (November 22). Expect the works, and guest lists that boast of Bollywood A-listers (Shahid and Mira Kapoor, and Sonam Kapoor are close friends, just so you know).

In short, it sounds like any other grand Indian celebrity wedding. Except, this is Masaba Gupta we’re talking about. As we catch up with her, we get the sense that she’s approached the whole thing with the same minimalism and quirkiness with which she approaches fashion. “A lot of people are invited,” she tells us, “But I’m not going around and talking about my wedding designer or my lipstick, so on and so forth.”

Unlike most Indian brides, she’s not even fretting over the big day, or days, as it were. “When I was growing up, I always saw brides around me under tremendous stress. The pressure to dress a certain way, wear a certain amount of jewellery and make-up... I saw how uncomfortable it was. So I decided that, if I do get married, I’ll be someone who puts comfort first, and then looks at her options for cut, colour, embroidery or jewellery,” says Gupta.

So, in case you do find yourself invited (otherwise, there’s always Instagram), don’t be surprised to see the most relaxed bride, dressed so comfortably that she’d be the envy of any married Indian woman. The idea, she says, is that a bride should “dress in a way that she can interact with people and have a good time herself.”

She’s also taken charge of the whole thing, and planned a non-fussy, non-extravagant celebration. “For me, three vacations is more value-for-money than a mandap with diamonds on it.”

True to her word, for her sangeet and reception, Gupta is ditching the norm of heavily designed lehengas and saris. “I didn’t go into that heavy, couture, bridal space. And I’m the kind of designer who wears works of other designers,” she says. So, her trousseau will have outfits by several other leading designers. “There are a few people who are great at doing certain things. Anamika [Khanna] is great at reception outfits. I can do a cool, quirky mehendi outfit. For a sangeet, somebody more in the Manish Arora or Shivan and Narresh kind of space,” she says.

The designer who’s always stood apart also seems keen to set an example. By not conforming to rules, Gupta wants to make a point. “I do want it to be about comfort, but I also want to change things up a bit. I want to set an example and say that you don’t need to wear a certain colour, a certain type of maang tika; your hair doesn’t have to look a particular way,” says the young designer.

Ask her if this is the (unconventional) dream wedding come true, and she laughs. “I never had a dream wedding. I’ve never visualised anything except clothes. Certainly not an elaborate wedding setup. See, I just don’t want to starve at my wedding. So, my dream wedding is one where I get to eat a meal while everyone else enjoys themselves as well.”

Masaba’s five-point guide to a chilled-out wedding

1) Get people to help out. If you try and look at every detail, you’re going to have a hard time. You may have a great input, but get people to do it for you.

2)People think you should shop for jewellery and clothes much in advance, but I think it should be done as close to the wedding as possible. You’ll have the latest stuff, and your taste might change over time. It’s best done around the wedding, so you don’t regret what you’ve bought.

3) Shoes are important. Make sure you’re in comfortable heels or flats, so you can survive the night.

4) Always test the make-up artist. Don’t just do a demo and leave it; test it through the day. See how the make-up behaves over a few hours, then you’ll know what it will actually be like, because it takes a couple of hours for make-up to set.

5) Receptions should start becoming more informal. You shouldn’t have to have the couple on stage smiling through the evening. I’ve heard of brides getting locked jaws. It’s absolute torture.

How to be the unconventional groom

• Fusion looks work well. If you’re wearing a Jodhpuri or a bandhgala, team it up with Jodhpuri pants. For men who are slimmer, suits do wonders.

• If you wish to be quirky and know you can carry it off, team dhoti pants and a shirt with a really formal blazer and a brooch.


• I love the cropped, ankle-length formal pants men are wearing now. It’s great for a reception.

• You don’t need to wear laced up shoes. Wear a nice slip-on in patent leather or a printed pair of shoes that stand out. So, you can make the whole look black and white, and have a nice pop shoe and make that the focus.

• Don’t be afraid of colours at your wedding. Get over navy blue, black or maroon. On a darker man, a haldi yellow kurta will look fantastic when teamed with an off-white or cream churidar. Even a soft pink in raw silk — it has a silver-pink shine — looks lovely.

How to be the ‘in vogue’ bride

• We’re seeing a lot of shapewear backs. Instead of the flared lehenga, women are opting for the fishtail cuts. Girls are also wearing shararas with big flares that almost look like a lehenga.

• Brides are going minimal. Go for less embellishment, and lighter lehengas.

• The dupatta is being ditched. Either that, or it’s attached. Much easier to handle.

• The choli is becoming more modest. People are wearing longer lengths, which are more fitted; the ‘60s style kurtas with shararas are also in. There’s more focus on the body and shape.

• I’m hoping the anarkali has died. It’s the worst of the lot. And it’s not very flattering. If you’re very skinny and tall, it works for you. If you’re short, you look like you’re lost in your outfit.

• Ditch the trail. At the end of the night, it’s a rag. It’s been stepped on and is *****.

read more:www.marieaustralia.com/mermaid-trumpet-formal-dresses

www.marieaustralia.com/cheap-formal-dresses
Nigel Morgan May 2015
In a distant land, far beyond the time we know now, there lived an ancient people who knew in their bones of a past outside memory. Things happened over and over; as day became night night became day, spring followed winter, summer followed spring, autumn followed summer and then, and then as autumn came, at least the well-known ordered days passed full of preparation for the transhumance, that great movement of flocks and herds from the summer mountains to the winter pastures. But in the great oak woods of this region the leaves seemed reluctant to fall. Even after the first frosts when the trees glimmered with rime as the sun rose. Even when winter’s cousin, the great wind from the west, ravaged the conical roofs of the shepherds’ huts. The leaves did not fall.

For Lucila, searching for leaves as she climbed each day higher and higher through the parched undergrowth under the most ancient oaks, there were only acorns, slews of acorns at her feet. There were no leaves, or rather no leaves that might be gathered as newly fallen. Only the faint husks of leaves of the previous autumn, leaves of provenance already gathered before she left the mountains last year for the winter plains, leaves she had placed into her deep sleeves, into her voluminous apron, into the large pockets of her vlaterz, the ornate felt jacket of the married woman.

Since her childhood she had picked and pocketed these oaken leaves, felt their thin, veined, patterned forms, felt, followed, caressed them between her finger tips. It was as though her pockets were full of the hands of children, seven-fingered hands, stroking her fingers with their pointed tips when her fingers were pocketed.

She would find private places to lay out her gathered leaves. She wanted none to know or touch or speak of these her children of the oak forest. She had waited all summer, as she had done since a child, watching them bud and grow on the branch, and then, with the frosts and winds of autumn, fall, fall, fall to the ground, but best of all fall into her small hands, every leaf there to be caught, fallen into the bowl of her cupped hands. And for every leaf caught, a wish.

Her autumn days became full of wishes. She would lie awake on her straw mattress after Mikas had risen for the night milking, that time when the rustling bells of the goats had no accompaniment from the birds. She would assemble her lists of wishes, wishes ready for leaves not yet fallen into the bowl of her cupped hands. May the toes of my baby be perfectly formed? May his hair fall straight without a single curl? May I know only the pain I can bear when he comes? May the mother of Mikas love this child?

As the fine autumn days moved towards the feast day of St Anolysius, the traditional day of departure of the winter transhumance, there was, this season, an unspoken tension present in the still, dry air. Already preparations were being made for the long journey to the winter plains. There was soon to be a wedding now three days away, of the Phatos boy to the Tamosel girl. The boy was from an adjoining summer pasture and had travelled during the summer months with an itinerant uncle, a pedlar of sorts and beggar of repute. So he had seen something of the world beyond those of the herds and flocks can expect to see. He was rightly-made and fit to marry, although, of course, the girl was to be well-kept secret until the day itself.

Lucila remembered those wedding days, her wedding days, those anxious days of waiting when encased in her finery, in her seemingly impenetrable and voluminous wedding clothes she had remained all but hidden from view. While around her the revelling came and went, the drunkenness, the feasting, the riotous eruptions of noise and movement, the sudden visitations of relatives she did not know, the fierce instructions of women who spoke to her now as a woman no longer a young girl or a dear child, women she knew as silent, shy and respectful who were now loud and lewd, who told her things she could hardly believe, what a man might do, what a man might be, what a woman had to suffer - all these things happening at the same time. And then her soon-to-be husband’s drunk-beyond-reason friends had carried off the basket with her trousseau and dressed themselves riotously in her finest embroidered blouses, her intricate layered skirts, her petticoats, even the nightdress deemed the one to be worn when eventually, after three days revelry, she would be visited by a man, now more goat than man, sodden with drink, insensible to what little she understood as human passion beyond the coupling of goats. Of course Semisar had prepared the bright blood for the bridesbed sheet, the necessary evidence, and as Mikas lay sprawled unconscious at the foot of the marriage bed she had allowed herself to be dishevelled, to feign the aftermath of the act he was supposed to have committed upon her. That would, she knew, come later . . .

It was then, in those terrible days and after, she took comfort from her silent, private stitching into leaves, the darning of acorns, the spinning of skeins of goats’ wool she would walnut-dye and weave around stones and pieces of glass. She would bring together leaves bound into tiny books, volumes containing for her a language of leaves, the signs and symbols of nature she had named, that only she knew. She could not read the words of the priest’s book but was fluent in the script of veins and ribs and patterning that every leaf owned. When autumn came she could hardly move a step for picking up a fallen leaf, reading its story, learning of its history. But this autumn now, at the time of leaf fall, the fall of the leaf did not happen and those leaves of last year at her feet were ready to disintegrate at her touch. She was filled with dread. She knew she could not leave the mountains without a collection of leaves to stitch and weave through the shorter days and long, long winter nights. She had imagined sharing with her infant child this language she had learnt, had stitched into her daily life.

It was Semisar of course, who voiced it first. Semisar, the self-appointed weather ears and horizon eyes of the community, who followed her into the woods, who had forced Lucila against a tree holding one broad arm and her body’s weight like a bar from which Lucila could not escape, and with the other arm and hand rifled the broad pockets of Lucila’s apron. Semisar tossed the delicate chicken bone needles to the ground, unravelled the bobbins of walnut-stained yarn, crumpled the delicately folded and stitched, but yet to be finished, constructions of leaves . . . And spewed forth a torrent of terrible words. Already the men knew that the lack of leaf fall was peculiar only to the woods above and around their village. Over the other side of the mountain Telgatho had said this was not so. Was Lucila a Magnelz? Perhaps a Cutvlael? This baby she carried, a girl of course, was already making evil. Semisar placed her hand over and around the ripe hard form of the unborn child, feeling for its shape, its elbows and knees, the spine. And from there, with a vicelike grip on the wrist, Semisar dragged Lucila up and far into the woods to where the mountain with its caves and rocks touched the last trees, and from there to the cave where she seemed to know Lucila’s treasures lay, her treasures from childhood. Semisar would destroy everything, then the leaves would surely fall.

When Lucila did not return to prepare the evening meal Mikas was to learn all. Should he leave her be? He had been told women had these times of strange behaviour before childbirth. The wedding of the Phatos boy was almost upon them and the young men were already behaving like goats before the rut. The festive candles and tinselled wedding crowns had been fetched from the nearest town two days ride distant, the decoration of the tiny mountain basilica and the accommodation for the priest was in hand. The women were busy with the making of sweets and treats to be thrown at the wedding pair by guests and well-wishers. Later, the same women would prepare the dough for the millstones of bread that would be baked in the stone ovens. The men had already chosen the finest lambs to spit-roast for the feast.

She will return, Semisar had said after waiting by the fold where Mikas flocks, now gathered from the heights, awaited their journey south. All will be well, Mikas, never fear. The infant, a girl, may not last its birth, Semisar warned, but seeing the shocked face of Mikas, explained a still-birth might be providential for all. Know this time will pass, she said, and you can still be blessed with many sons. We are forever in the hands of the spirit, she said, leaving without the customary salutation of farewell.
                                               
However different the lives of man and woman may by tradition and circumstance become, those who share the ways and rites of marriage are inextricably linked by fate’s own hand and purpose. Mikas has come to know his once-bride, the child become woman in his clumsy embrace, the girl of perhaps fifteen summers fulfilling now his mother’s previous role, who speaks little but watches and listens, is unfailingly attentive to his needs and demands, and who now carries his child ( it can only be a boy), carries this boy high in her womb and with a confidence his family has already remarked upon.

After their wedding he had often returned home to Lucila at the time of the sun’s zenith when it is customary for the village women to seek the shade of their huts and sleep. It was an unwritten rite due to a newly-wed husband to feign the sudden need for a forgotten tool or seek to examine a sick animal in the home fold. After several fruitless visits when he found their hut empty he timed his visit earlier to see her black-scarfed figure disappear into the oak woods.  He followed her secretively, and had observed her seated beneath an ancient warrior of a tree, had watched over her intricate making. Furthermore and later he came to know where she hid the results of this often fevered stitching of things from nature’s store and stash, though an supernatural fear forbade him to enter the cleft between rocks into which she would disappear. He began to know how times and turns of the days affected her actions, but had left her be. She would usually return bright-eyed and with a quiet wonder, of what he did not know, but she carried something back within her that gave her a peculiar peace and beauty. It seemed akin to the well-being Mikas knew from handling a fine ewe from his flock . . .

And she would sometimes allow herself to be handled thus. She let him place his hands over her in that joyful ownership and command of a man whose life is wholly bound up with flocks and herds and the well-being of the female species. He would come from the evening watch with the ever-constant count of his flock still on his lips, and by a mixture of accident and stealth touch her wholly-clothed body, sometimes needing his fingers into the thick wool of her stockings, stroking the chestnut silken hairs that he found above her bare wrists, marvelling at her small hands with their perfect nails. He knew from the ribaldry of men that women were trained from childhood to display to men as little as possible of their intimate selves. But alone and apart all day on a remote hillside, alone save for several hundred sheep, brought to Mikas in his solitary state wild and conjured thoughts of feminine spirits, unencumbered by clothes, brighter and more various than any night-time dream. And he had succumbed to the pleasure of such thoughts times beyond reason, finding himself imagining Lucila as he knew she was unlikely ever to allow herself to be. But even in the single winter and summer of their life together there had been moments of surprise and revelation, and accompanied by these precious thoughts he went in search of her in the darkness of a three-quarter moon, into the stillness of the night-time wood.

Ah Lucilla. We might think that after the scourge of Semisar, the physical outrage of her baby’s forced examination, and finally the destruction of her treasures, this child-wife herself with child would be desolate with grief at what had come about. She had not been forced to follow Semisar into the small cave where wrapped in woven blankets her treasures lay between the thinnest sheets of impure and rejected parchment gleaned surreptitiously after shearing, but holding each and every treasure distinct and detached. There was enough light for Semisar to pause in wonder at the intricate constructions, bright with the aura of extreme fragility owned by many of the smaller makings. And not just the leaves of the oak were here, but of the mastic, the walnut, the flaky-barked strawberry and its smoothed barked cousin. There were leaves and sheaves of bark from lowland trees of the winter sojourn, there were dried fruits mysteriously arranged, constructions of acorns threaded with the dark madder-red yarn, even acorns cracked and damaged from their tree fall had been ‘mended’ with thread.

Semisar was to open some of the tiny books of leaved pages where she witnessed a form of writing she did not recognise (she could not read but had seen the priest’s writing and the print of the holy books). This she wondered at, as surely Lucila had only the education of the home? Such symbols must belong to the spirit world. Another sign that Lucila had infringed order and disturbed custom. It would take but a matter of minutes to turn such makings into little more than a layer of dust on the floor.

With her bare hands Semisar ground together these elaborate confections, these lovingly-made conjunctions of needle’s art with nature’s purpose and accidental beauty. She ground them together until they were dust.

When Semisar returned into the pale afternoon light it seemed Lucila had remained as she had been left: motionless, and without expression. If Semisar had known the phenomenon of shock, Lucila was in that condition. But, in the manner of a woman preparing to grieve for the dead she had removed her black scarf and unwound the long dark chestnut plaits that flowed down her back. But there were no tears. only a dumb silence but for the heavy exhalation of breath. It seemed that she looked beyond Semisar into the world of spirits invoking perhaps their aid, their comfort.

What happened had neither invoked sadness nor grief. It was as if it had been ordained in the elusive pattern of things. It felt like the clearing of the summer hut before the final departure for the long journey to the winter world. The hut, Lucila had been taught, was to be left spotless, every item put in its rightful place ready to be taken up again on the return to the summer life, exactly as if it had been undisturbed by absence . Not a crumb would remain before the rugs and coverings were rolled and removed, summer clothes hard washed and tightly mended, to be folded then wrapped between sprigs of aromatic herbs.

Lucila would go now and collect her precious but scattered needles from beneath the ancient oak. She would begin again - only to make and embroider garments for her daughter. It was as though, despite this ‘loss’, she had retained within her physical self the memory of every stitch driven into nature’s fabric.

Suddenly Lucila remembered that saints’ day which had sanctioned a winter’s walk with her mother, a day when her eyes had been drawn to a world of patterns and objects at her feet: the damaged acorn, the fractured leaf, the broken berried branch, the wisp of wool left impaled upon a stub of thorns. She had been five, maybe six summers old. She had already known the comforting action of the needle’s press again the felted cloth, but then, as if impelled by some force quite outside herself, had ‘borrowed’ one of her mother’s needles and begun her odyssey of darning, mending, stitching, enduring her mother’s censure - a waste of good thread, little one - until her skill became obvious and one of delight, but a private delight her mother hid from all and sundry, and then pressed upon her ‘proper’ work with needle and thread. But the damage had been done, the dye cast. She became nature’s needle slave and quartered those personal but often invisible
Carlo C Gomez Dec 2019
Glass divides
where the heart does not,
come inside,
sit beside me
in annex to this fledgling love,
spurn the sun,
in lieu of its warmth,
for the charm of
an intimate hideaway,
sweet somethings
I shall whisper into your ear,
until inner vibrations
have reached your core,
the view from here
speaks of gardens,
fountains, and holy ground,
I give them all to you
as trousseau,
so long as you agree
to dwell with me,
within a niche
of the imperishable lustre,
togetherness.
JG O'Connor Jun 2017
I’ve become  invisible
Maybe it’s a virus and I’ve just got a touch,
The automatic shop door didn’t open so I’m left in a lurch,
Even when  I stood on the spot once blessed by the church.
Then the shop attendant missed me in the queue,
A car nearly knocked me on the footpath too.
Clearly I’m unseen.

As this progresses will my eyelids become translucent?
With my eyes shut how will I sleep?
Maybe I should wear dark glasses and not take a peek.
If I wear clothes will it be funny?
I will definitely get a job as a shop window dummy.
Is that what happens in the invisible limbos,
We become manikins in shop windows,  
Watching the world looking at them,
What we the invisible will be able to tell.

From my shop window I imagine at half past eight,
The people hang out or just walk past straight.
Starting with the kids skipping school,
Uniform tucked in schoolbag to fool,
Shopping bag used for energy joule,
Inhaling glue this hallucinatory fuel.
Each step these children take,
One step closer to heartbreak.

Then the anxious wife meeting her lover.  
Leaving behind her domestic bliss,
Sealed this morning with a husband’s watery kiss.
Waiting awkwardly in her Totoro dress,
One button behind and a zip does the rest .
Trying hard to be invisible too
This could all end in her being blue.

The rushing shop manager dressed in a suit.
Cuffs worn thin, pens in a group,
Red, blue and black,
A tick for success or none for the lack.
Mumbling along the company mantra,
“Think outside the box” there’s as good fella.
The only box he has ever known,
Are the imaginary boundaries in which he has grown.


A dog and his master trundle along.
He has been dead for years as he moves on,
Wearing a shroud of a used up life,
The dog squats down beside the tree of life.
Observing this stool in the daylight,
He compares to the Hematochezia he did last night.

A husband contemplating murdering his wife,
As the news of her lover has just come to light.  
He looks at the manikin with some delight,
Seduced by its empty invisible soul,  
Only to discover he owns that hole.

Then evening descends the lights are all up,
When work is all over it’s off to the pub.
Not for the invisible manikin though,
Who stays in the window dressed in a bride’s trousseau.
An invisible exhibitionist this poor sod,
So when you walk past it's polite to nod.
Now I’ll take two Aspirin and a cup of coco
And hope to God this invisibility will go go.
Innocent Jul 2014
She wears it around her neck on a chain. Safe in the only home it's known, smug between her *******.
A key to her first diary, where she wrote about her hopes and her dreams. About her love for the boy down the street and about how she lost her virginity and cried for a week.        
A key to her trousseau, holding warmth from the blankets and linens,  practicality from the dishware,  love from  the Shakespeare poems and long awaited hope from the yellowing lace.  
A key to her first home, with the white picket fence and the swing set in the back. Where her children would grow up, where laughter would ring and loneliness would echo in the halls                
A key to her favorite jewelry box, with the diamond earrings and macaroni necklace.  The discarded ring that she had to ask for and that never quite fit  
He knows the key is there, he's seen it for 3 decades.  He knows the devastation that is in store if he uses it.
Its the key to open her heart.
brandon nagley May 2015
Today I felt it!!!
For one second that forlorness had left me,
The incandesce had made me tepid, as the flowers are in full efflorescence!!!
I was high but for a moment!!!

Sandal's I took off, as this spirit soared free,
1960s, 2015, for what's the difference other than I'm a fossil soul in an adolescent chassis!!!

I saw purple buds,
White silked loves to wrap around the logs once sparked by lightning!!!
Exquisite inviting's!!!!

Thine aisle's I walked were cloaked by air-conditioned Trousseau's, for I wish I hadn't needed clothes,
I'll be amongst between the bush,
Lost in its allurement,
Plagued by its touch!!!

Yet suddenly,
Crashing down upon me....

Came back the whirlwind of lost buoyancy,
No queen in sight,
Nor bride to be!!!

Just thou an me antiquated stock!!!!

Paramount I am to find this naiad of unconventional standards,
Where her luminosity can be mine pattern,

To where these broke in toes,
Can unwind to her nursery!!!!!!!!
John F McCullagh May 2012
That night was cold,
The wind was biting.
All over Ireland
the snow was falling

“I was packing
my trousseau,
To Dublin town
I was to go.”
“I heard a pebble
strike my pane.
A moment passed,
then, there, again.”
“I looked out
On the snow filled lane.
That’s when I saw him,
Saw my Michael.
His pale face raised
toward my light.
Like an angel
lost in contemplation.”
“Michael’s health was not the best.
His lungs were weak
and fluid filled.”
“Soon after I had left the West,
I heard that he had fallen ill.”
“He’s buried now near Sligo town,
between Ben Bulben and the sea.
Michael Furey's soul is free,
You know, I think he died for me.”
Speaker is a woman named Greta. the title character's death plays a pivotal role in the  final story of James Joyce's collection "Dubliners" in the story titled "The Death"
Œil pour œil ! Dent pour dent ! Tête pour tête ! A mort !
Justice ! L'échafaud vaut mieux que le remord.
Talion ! talion !

- Silence aux cris sauvages !
Non ! assez de malheur, de meurtre et de ravages !
Assez d'égorgements ! assez de deuil ! assez
De fantômes sans tête et d'affreux trépassés !
Assez de visions funèbres dans la brume !
Assez de doigts hideux, montrant le sang qui fume,
Noirs, et comptant les trous des linceuls dans la nuit !
Pas de suppliciés dont le cri nous poursuit !
Pas de spectres jetant leur ombre sur nos têtes !
Nous sommes ruisselants de toutes les tempêtes ;
Il n'est plus qu'un devoir et qu'une vérité,
C'est, après tant d'angoisse et de calamité.
Homme, d'ouvrir son cœur, oiseau, d'ouvrir son aile
Vers ce ciel que remplit la grande âme éternelle !
Le peuple, que les rois broyaient sous leurs talons.
Est la pierre promise au temple, et nous voulons
Que la pierre bâtisse et non qu'elle lapide !
Pas de sang ! pas de mort ! C'est un reflux stupide
Que la férocité sur la férocité.
Un pilier d'échafaud soutient mal la cité.
Tu veux faire mourir ! Moi je veux faire naître !
Je mure le sépulcre et j'ouvre la fenêtre.
Dieu n'a pas fait le sang, à l'amour réservé.
Pour qu'on le donne à boire aux fentes du pavé.
S'agit-il d'égorger ? Peuples, il s'agit d'être.
Quoi ! tu veux te venger, passant ? de qui ? du maître ?
Si tu ne vaux pas mieux, que viens-tu faire ici ?
Tout mystère où l'on jette un meurtre est obscurci ;
L'énigme ensanglantée est plus âpre à résoudre ;
L'ombre s'ouvre terrible après le coup de foudre ;
Tuer n'est pas créer, et l'on se tromperait
Si l'on croyait que tout finit au couperet ;
C'est là qu'inattendue, impénétrable, immense.
Pleine d'éclairs subits, la question commence ;
C'est du bien et du mal ; mais le mal est plus grand.
Satan rit à travers l'échafaud transparent.
Le bourreau, quel qu'il soit, a le pied dans l'abîme ;
Quoi qu'elle fasse, hélas ! la hache fait un crime ;
Une lugubre nuit fume sur ce tranchant ;
Quand il vient de tuer, comme, en s'en approchant.
On frémit de le voir tout ruisselant, et comme
On sent qu'il a frappé dans l'ombre plus qu'un homme
Sitôt qu'a disparu le coupable immolé.
Hors du panier tragique où la tête a roulé.
Le principe innocent, divin, inviolable.
Avec son regard d'astre à l'aurore semblable.
Se dresse, spectre auguste, un cercle rouge au cou.
L'homme est impitoyable, hélas, sans savoir où.
Comment ne voit-il pas qu'il vit dans un problème.
Que l'homme est solidaire avec ses monstres même.
Et qu'il ne peut tuer autre chose qu'Abel !
Lorsqu'une tête tombe, on sent trembler le ciel.
Décapitez Néron, cette hyène insensée,
La vie universelle est dans Néron blessée ;
Faites monter Tibère à l'échafaud demain,
Tibère saignera le sang du genre humain.
Nous sommes tous mêlés à ce que fait la Grève ;
Quand un homme, en public, nous voyant comme un rêve.
Meurt, implorant en vain nos lâches abandons.
Ce meurtre est notre meurtre et nous en répondons ;
C'est avec un morceau de notre insouciance.
C'est avec un haillon de notre conscience.
Avec notre âme à tous, que l'exécuteur las
Essuie en s'en allant son hideux coutelas.
L'homme peut oublier ; les choses importunes
S'effacent dans l'éclat ondoyant des fortunes ;
Le passé, l'avenir, se voilent par moments ;
Les festins, les flambeaux, les feux, les diamants.
L'illumination triomphale des fêtes.
Peuvent éclipser l'ombre énorme des prophètes ;
Autour des grands bassins, au bord des claires eaux.
Les enfants radieux peuvent aux cris d'oiseaux
Mêler le bruit confus de leurs lèvres fleuries.
Et, dans le Luxembourg ou dans les Tuileries,
Devant les vieux héros de marbre aux poings crispés.
Danser, rire et chanter : les lauriers sont coupés !
La Courtille au front bas peut noyer dans les verres
Le souvenir des jours illustres et sévères ;
La valse peut ravir, éblouir, enivrer
Des femmes de satin, heureuses de livrer
Le plus de nudité possible aux yeux de flamme ;
L'***** peut murmurer son chaste épithalame ;
Le bal masqué, lascif, paré, bruyant, charmant,
Peut allumer sa torche et bondir follement.
Goule au linceul joyeux, larve en fleurs, spectre rose ;
Mais, quel que soit le temps, quelle que soit la cause.
C'est toujours une nuit funeste au peuple entier
Que celle où, conduisant un prêtre, un guichetier
Fouille au trousseau de clefs qui pend à sa ceinture
Pour aller, sur le lit de fièvre et de torture,
Réveiller avant l'heure un pauvre homme endormi,
Tandis que, sur la Grève, entrevus à demi.
Sous les coups de marteau qui font fuir la chouette.
D'effrayants madriers dressent leur silhouette.
Rougis par la lanterne horrible du bourreau.
Le vieux glaive du juge a la nuit pour fourreau.
Le tribunal ne peut de ce fourreau livide
Tirer que la douleur, l'anxiété, le vide,
Le néant, le remords, l'ignorance et l'effroi.

Qu'il frappe au nom du peuple ou venge au nom du roi.
Justice ! dites-vous. - Qu'appelez-vous justice ?
Qu'on s'entr'aide, qu'on soit des frères, qu'on vêtisse
Ceux qui sont nus, qu'on donne à tous le pain sacré.
Qu'on brise l'affreux bagne où le pauvre est muré,
Mais qu'on ne touche point à la balance sombre !
Le sépulcre où, pensif, l'homme naufrage et sombre.
Au delà d'aujourd'hui, de demain, des saisons.
Des jours, du flamboiement de nos vains horizons,
Et des chimères, proie et fruit de notre étude,
A son ciel plein d'aurore et fait de certitude ;
La justice en est l'astre immuable et lointain.
Notre justice à nous, comme notre destin.
Est tâtonnement, trouble, erreur, nuage, doute ;
Martyr, je m'applaudis ; juge, je me redoute ;
L'infaillible, est-ce moi, dis ? est-ce toi ? réponds.
Vous criez : - Nos douleurs sont notre droit. Frappons.
Nous sommes trop en butte au sort qui nous accable.
Nous sommes trop frappés d'un mal inexplicable.
Nous avons trop de deuils, trop de jougs, trop d'hivers.
Nous sommes trop souffrants, dans nos destins divers.
Tous, les grands, les petits, les obscurs, les célèbres.
Pour ne pas condamner quelqu'un dans nos ténèbres. -
Puisque vous ne voyez rien de clair dans le sort.
Ne vous hâtez pas trop d'en conclure la mort.
Fût-ce la mort d'un roi, d'un maître et d'un despote ;
Dans la brume insondable où tout saigne et sanglote,
Ne vous hâtez pas trop de prendre vos malheurs.
Vos jours sans feu, vos jours sans pain, vos cris, vos pleurs.
Et ce deuil qui sur vous et votre race tombe.
Pour les faire servir à construire une tombe.
Quel pas aurez-vous fait pour avoir ajouté
A votre obscur destin, ombre et fatalité.
Cette autre obscurité que vous nommez justice ?
Faire de l'échafaud, menaçante bâtisse.
Un autel à bénir le progrès nouveau-né,
Ô vivants, c'est démence ; et qu'aurez-vous gagné
Quand, d'un culte de mort lamentables ministres.
Vous aurez marié ces infirmes sinistres,
La justice boiteuse et l'aveugle anankè ?
Le glaive toujours cherche un but toujours manqué ;
La palme, cette flamme aux fleurs étincelantes,
Faite d'azur, frémit devant des mains sanglantes.
Et recule et s'enfuit, sensitive des cieux !
La colère assouvie a le front soucieux.
Quant à moi, tu le sais, nuit calme où je respire,
J'aurais là, sous mes pieds, mon ennemi, le pire,
Caïn juge, Judas pontife, Satan roi.
Que j'ouvrirais ma porte et dirais : Sauve-toi !

Non, l'élargissement des mornes cimetières
N'est pas le but. Marchons, reculons les frontières
De la vie ! Ô mon siècle, allons toujours plus haut !
Grandissons !

Qu'est-ce donc qu'il nous veut, l'échafaud.
Cette charpente spectre accoutumée aux foules.
Cet îlot noir qu'assiège et que bat de ses houles
La multitude aux flots inquiets et mouvants.
Ce sépulcre qui vient attaquer les vivants,
Et qui, sur les palais ainsi que sur les bouges.
Surgit, levant un glaive au bout de ses bras rouges ?
Mystère qui se livre aux carrefours, morceau
De la tombe qui vient tremper dans le ruisseau,
Bravant le jour, le bruit, les cris ; bière effrontée
Qui, féroce, cynique et lâche, semble athée !
Ô spectacle exécré dans les plus repoussants.
Une mort qui se fait coudoyer aux passants,
Qui permet qu'un crieur hors de l'ombre la tire !
Une mort qui n'a pas l'épouvante du rire.
Dévoilant l'escalier qui dans la nuit descend,
Disant : voyez ! marchant dans la rue, et laissant
La boue éclabousser son linceul semé d'astres ;
Qui, sur un tréteau, montre entre deux vils pilastres
Son horreur, son front noir, son œil de basilic ;
Qui consent à venir travailler en public,
Et qui, prostituée, accepte, sur les places,
La familiarité des fauves populaces !

Ô vivant du tombeau, vivant de l'infini,
Jéhovah ! Dieu, clarté, rayon jamais terni.
Pour faire de la mort, de la nuit, des ténèbres,
Ils ont mis ton triangle entre deux pieux funèbres ;
Et leur foule, qui voit resplendir ta lueur.
Ne sent pas à son front poindre une âpre sueur.
Et l'horreur n'étreint pas ce noir peuple unanime.
Quand ils font, pour punir ce qu'ils ont nommé crime.
Au nom de ce qu'ils ont appelé vérité.
Sur la vie, o terreur, tomber l'éternité !
Kissamos Council

They arrive in the afternoon with their faces tanned by the Cretan sun. Vernarth in his Alikanto pass to a first instance that presents them with a chronological table and a map where the archaeological sites of finds from the geometric period and the historical development of one of the oldest and most important areas in the area would be located; Polirrenia and Falasarna. Searching as usual if any evidence of knowledge of any news from Etréstles would be presented in the various necropolis of the city. They crossed Chania to reach Heraklion, arriving at Arjanes unexpectedly.

The Minoan necropolis of Furní was present to them, as an archaeological site located on the eponymous hill, on the island of Crete that contains remains of the Minoan civilization. The archaeological site is located near Arjanes, where there was a Minoan settlement on Mount Juktas, where there was an important sanctuary. It is a necropolis that was in use for a long period of time, 1200 BC. C. Excavations have uncovered a wide variety of funerary monuments, hundreds of burials, and rich grave goods. Vernarth pursuing the nose of Etréstles, knew he would control here the remains of the trousseau, monuments and precious jewels. Before leaving for the Castelli hills, to which he had to guard the relics. Etréstles is the celestial jurist abbot of the Koumeterium of Messolonghi, and of all the necropolis of the world, mainly Hellenic until the death of Alexander the Great 332 a. C., and perpetually.

As usual Etréstles always transmigrates for each intraterrestrial city, beyond all expression. "He is the supreme minister of the moldy wall, of whose solid stones he still continues to reside beneath those as a simple abandoned mushroom." … These are the ominous words that Vernarth emits when they began to take flight to Kalymnos.

Raeder hung with both hands over the jasper-plated iron hoops that come from reiterating the Greek "iaspis", which means "stained stone".Which was now stained green, like the stripes on Alikanto's hooves. He had to go to the ancient lands of Raeder's parents, where his ancestors came from; Kinaros, between Leros Island and Kalymnos. Vernarth jumped with joy knowing that his supernatural little friend would take him to those lands unknown to him. He takes Alikanto and leaves, behind and turning in circles, he was escorted by Reader, clinging to the golden rings that the pelican Petrobus invested.

Kalymnos

They land in the lavish waters where the Pelican Petrobus originated. They descend on an afternoon of great hot festivity. The peasant people celebrated having had a good harvest. Also not to be happy about the novelty of being fortunate to have no misfortune to have to regret tribulations for some charm of other maidens towards the Cave of the Nymphs, and where Apollo was the patron god of Kalymnos. This sanctuary was the political and religious center from the beginning of the first millennium BC. C.until the first centuries AD. The inhabitants of Kalymnos were the first Greeks to convert to Christianity thanks to their proximity to Asia Minor since Saint Paul and Saint John made a stop on the island, in the Christian era, building numerous churches decorated with mosaics. They enter the island's port, they walk in unbridled revelry after being greeted at the port. At dusk they arrive at Jorió, to find the Venetian castle of the knights of the order of San Juan completely covered in blue olive oil (a phenomenon that had been caused by the previous visit of Etrésltes and her entourage). In the same way they make the anteroom to the northeast, finding the Grotto of the Seven Virgins or Nymphs. Whose satire succumbed to some incredulous neighborhoods, hiding some of his younger daughters after denying their consummation. This is not a minor narrative legend of how seven young girls disappeared into the cave when they fled from pirates. Noticing depending on whether it could be so, also the clues to find Etréstles who had been here recently.

Petrobus the Pelican resorts where the colonies of his ancestors. He had the gold rings on his neck. He had no contact with his native colony since the last day they helped with water in the fields due to the lack of fresh water. It is worth noting their property of converting salt water into fresh water, but even more so the quality of Petrobus, in addition to where they step on their feet they will all shine and rejuvenate. It decentralizes its wings with allotropic tints, which made it turn colors, in addition to strengthening and relieving its body in long periods of flight. He lifts his beak and flies vertically to meet Reader and Vernarth in the Early Christian Necropolis of the funeral chapels. Here they meditate and offer their submission to the wind that flows with great power under the catacombs, pulling and moving the spirits that want to relocate with their placebo presiding over their doubts. .

They leave the port, boarding a Triacontero that would take them to Kinaros before night falls and is seized by the coastal fog that does not resist rope that holds a ship whatever it was; many times these ships were maneuvered by rowing sailors. But this time it was only consigned to them, it would only move without anyone having to intervene; only the eternal and kind wind will have to take them to the island of Reader's parents.

Kinaros
Triacontero Ship

On the transparent waters sailing in the Triacóntero were the Three. Vernarth at the bow, Petrobus at the main mast of the canopy, and Raeder next to him a few meters from Vernarth, remembering his parents when they emigrated from this island. The name of the ship that was named was "Eurydice". Every certain space of advance, she approached the mask to empty the tears that this Nymph emanated from her semi-open eyes. Vernarth took a cloth of sacred linen and dried the flows that should not have been more than for some reason that he wanted to know?

When they arrived near Kinaros, a rainy cyclone increased, raising them above the surface of the island, when they were less than 5 km away. Vernarth takes his Xiphos sword and cuts the ropes. Then Raeder, noticing that they were in serious danger of being shipwrecked, tells Vernarth to get out of the ship quickly. Vernarth runs to the bow and covers the eyes of Eurydice's Mascaron and leaves the ship. With his epic metaphysical thinking, he acclaims his magical steed Alikanto, he flies over the ship and picks them up, and Reader takes hold of the hoops on Petrobus's legs, reaching solid ground.

Kinaros is a land of fishermen and farmers. Long-lived land of ancient inhabitants that do not age. There are no cemeteries or monuments here. There is only eternal spring for those who can be grateful for a place that gives them peace and melancholic love from those who do not live there. Here, from this generous land come the Raeder Fathers. They migrated to Kalimnos; being this lands the one that saw it born and immortalizes it. So remember...:
"In the Dodecanese islands subdued by the carmine dew that falls in the morning on its crystalline waters, on sandy or gravel beaches of important archaeological remains and scenes to compete in athletic leisure, Raeder ran naked after the clothes that his mother had readymade. It was covered by crystalline Byzantine monuments and medieval architecture due to the long Venetian ******* in its mannerisms. What unites it to these islands, their history and their occupations: that of the knights of the crusades to that of the Turks, the Italian occupation to the Greek annexation with their volatile useless attire to dress? Patmos is very popular with pilgrims from the moment his work was raised in one of the caves on the island of Saint John the Evangelist, a disciple of Christ, writing the Book of Revelations.
Astipalea is the westernmost island in the archipelago and has architectural features from the Dodecanese Cyclades. It is also related here in the Etréstles de Kalavrita novel matter of his victorious boast to Patmos, when he resorts after the reverie of the Laziko Dance in which they seized the little finger and circulated in commemoration of the stripping of the rebirth of spring with La Sousta of the Dodecanese. These dances were generated on the ocean floor of the Ionian Sea, generating the power of the ethereal emananation of Etrestles from Kalavrita by daring to put Eclectic confrontation on the invisible portal of Evangelist Saint John in his sacred basaltic cavern in the Patmos archipelago (Koumeterium Messolonghi, Chapter 16 / page 114. Editorial Palibrio - USA)

In the Chapel of Ministers

They were seconded by the high representatives of Kalimnos, among them the curious immortal serpentine Raeder. Son of farmers, natives of Kinaros belonging to a group clan of six small islands and six small families. Some islets used to flaunt the genealogical beams of the Antigone challenges and documented inspirations found between Leros and Kalymnos in the east and the Cycladic island of Amorgós in the west.

Raeder always got up before dawn, and a petite blue bonsai Pelican always appeared on the threshold of his window; called him Petrobus. In the mornings, he ran, beating this Olympic bird in a quick dispute. Sometimes he could not say goodbye to his friendly bird, because he ran so fast that the days used to be weeks in a row, while Petrobus snorted through the skies with his wings of Hellenic Artificial Intelligence. With his hyper exhalation he moved large rocky cliffs, even moving and disorganizing the geographical nomenclature of these twelve polygonal islands of the Dodecanese.
The least known and uncontaminated islands are Leros or Pserimos, while Rhodes and Cos, the largest and most cosmopolitan islands, are the target of migrant Blue Pelicans throughout the year. Before returning home, Raeder stretched out on the grasses sheared by the heels of the Petrobus migrants and their minions. In this dancing grass I could feel the dances with gag bread dancing on all the hips of the damsels of the Sousta dance by his arms. He ran after Petrobus with his golden mask and hung on the legs of his bird (Wings Mate), the art of flying with golden magic birds and his Ancient Antigone Mama.

When he sometimes flew by the feet of Petrobus, he thought..
"My ground ... a thousand times I will lift you with my arms, do not hesitate my arms believe it ...
Oh my revered Ionian, I will apnea to please you a thousand times to become your Ionic molecule...
Wind by Kalimnos himself ..., I will make the Oda flute that travels through the twelve pierced epitaphs of my ancestors in Dodecanese asleep of paroxysm in the chapel where I was baptized for the ninth time!
And by the fatuous lavish Fire I will put the ceremonial ribbon of the Sousta Dance in the siesta of the new migration of my transparent Pelicans…. ”.

Raeder tells Petrobus visibly excited imagining crying with his imagined friend. "The little Raeder from the Dodecanese region", he tells his magical imaginary friend; what was the most missing Petrobus of ground breadcrumb paste for next winter?
Petrobus tells him not looking at him ..., just placing his palm-legged heliophylloid leg on his other one like ...: Nothing, fear Raeder, God does not exist!. Now He and you are the same. You will be able to lift the sphere of the flat earth with your arms and convert it into a healthy land of milk and honey from our Kalimnos that runs like mud over the mountains of your Life turned into a new House dressed in a new house”.

When Raeder finishes thinking ..., Vernarth tells him that they had to set sail for Patmos. Curiously in the bay was the ship of Eurydice. They believed that this ship had capsized and sunk somewhere on the wide Aegean high seas. The three boards the ship Eurydice, Alikanto stays in Kinaros grazing in good safety from the peasants who took great affection for him. Later she would join him in Patmos for the service and pantry of the offices for Saint John the Evangelist. Alikanto will take a great contribution and role in the prophecies of Vernarth on the Isle of Patmos.
Vernarth  Ciclades passage
SøułSurvivør Jan 2017
WAR
Chaos of the trolls of Mars
Havoc wrought by fallen stars
Terror flailing, caught by night
Pawns move one space, born to fight
Women make a frightful pact
Carry babes into the act
The stench of bodies as they pile
Questions not for rank and file
Bouncing Betty's horror, aye
Shrapnel flung to meet an eye
Bullets dodged, and bullets met

The Bomb's the best idea yet... !

Men sit desks behind the scenes
Living on the blood of spleens
Generals spew their jingo kant
Presidential "patriots" shpeel their rants
All the King's horses, all the King's men
Do things WAY beyond OUR ken
Mother's sons get GI Joes
Daddy dies... and on it goes

A testament to heartless greed

A bride's trousseau is widow's weeds.


SoulSurvivor
(C) 1/26/2017
Blood making mud of foreign sod
War's a stench in the nose of GOD!
Corset Jul 2015
In this house is a trousseau of deception
walking into Clarksdale
where we are perpendicular lines
of perception
at a crossroad of 61 & 49.


She pretends to be a guitar
played by his aching tooth
where she dressed all in scarlet
put candies in her cooch.

She is a ledge of peeks and coos
Pigeons of Pharmacia
scroll peoples lives from Venice beach
come to be souls just out of reach.

..and a voice shouts out from heaven
it's not to late to turn back
just a little faith my girl
is all that you really lack.

she wanted someone to save him
well, that's just not my job
those are words for redeemers
where I simply refuse to mob.

But I hope to see you there my friend
should you find yourself able
feast on the words of lambs
Eucharists at his table.

Come, we'll hold
his hand together
no longer singing
words of one,
run, scatter
hide
as innocent
babes
of Babylon.
Beloved
I am so anguished and ashamed

I have yet to surrender my
trousseau of sense enjoyments,
possessions and attachments

Vasanas, earthly passions
run deep like serpents
beneath my skin
blue green veins of pride,
anger, lust, fear
feed and nourish them

Blissful, chaste companion
when I gaze into pure, limpid
pools of your eyes and
drop my heart into those
starlit wishing wells

108 times

Only one prayer
remains on my bucket list
Louise Sep 2024
Je sais que tu ne peux toujours
pas m'oublier, comme ta belle histoire.
Tu ne peux pas oublier mon nom
non plus, c'est comme chuchoter "bonsoir".
Je veux oublier comment tu prononces
mon nom, mais je n'arrive pas à me souvenir
d'admettre que tu l'as dit le mieux.
Peut-être que je le ferais enfin si seulement
tu me disais aussi s'il y a quelqu'un qui
pourrait t'embrasser mieux que moi.
Même si mes amis me coupaient
la tête parce que je pense encore
à toi dix mois plus ****,
même si le monde entier
me faisait un procès parce
que je continue à essayer
d'écrire sur toi après un an,
je me brosserais les cheveux,
remonte mes seins,
je mettrais mon trousseau,
réparer ma jupe
je me tiendrais devant une vitre et je dirais:
"Qu'ils mangent du brioche!"
mais pas après que tu aies
encore goûté à mon gâteau.
Mais pas après que tu aies
encore goûté à mon gâteau,
encore et encore...
Non, je ne regrette rien...
Sauvik Dey Jul 2017
A white cloak of a shy anecdote
A shy remembrance of a serene quote
Quoted some moments ago-
Of coquette and sensual bliss,
An innocence matted with a fresh breeze.

Those eyes could never lie;
With sand heaving down on her *******,
Her heart weeps for a caress
But all she gets is a rebuke:
Blending the imbroglio to deeper depths.

Late though it was; came by-
A hope; an outline of somber reversed,
Pristine of thought and complete with chivalry
A distinct epitah of orchids mellowed,
And a fragrance of an unkempt prose.

The moments of those transient powerlessness;
The time when she felt weak at her knees;
She was somebody’s love then,
Somebody’s queen she was
Such was the power of love.

Her heart at last sang her sangeet,
Shahnias and santoors draped her bond amused,
Trousseau she had was all beautiful,
For the first time; she had not been shy;
Her love was now somebody’s prayer.

-by Sauvik Dey.
Mais gloire aux cathédrales !
Pleines d'ombre et de feux, de silence et de râles,
Avec leur forêt d'énormes piliers
Et leur peuple de saints, moines et chevaliers,
Ce sont des cités au-dessus des villes,
Que gardent seulement les sons irréguliers
De l'aumône, au fond des sébiles,
Sous leurs porches hospitaliers.
Humblement agenouillées
Comme leurs sœurs des champs dans les herbes mouillées,
Sous le clocher d'ardoise ou le dôme d'étain,
Où les angélus clairs tintent dans le matin,
Les églises et les chapelles
Des couvents,
Tout au **** vers elles,
Mêlent un rire allègre au rire amer des vents,
En joyeuses vassales ;
Mais elles, dans les cieux traversés des vautours,
Comme au cœur d'une ruche, aux cages de leurs tours,
C'est un bourdonnement de guêpes colossales.
Voyez dans le nuage blanc
Qui traverse là-haut des solitudes bleues,
Par-dessus les balcons d'où l'on voit les banlieues,
Voyez monter la flèche au coq étincelant,
Qui, toute frémissante et toujours plus fluette,
Défiant parfois les regards trop lents,
Va droit au ciel se perdre, ainsi que l'alouette.
Ceux-là qui dressèrent la tour
Avec ses quatre rangs d'ouïes
Qui versent la rumeur des cloches éblouies,
Ceux qui firent la porte avec les saints autour,
Ceux qui bâtirent la muraille,
Ceux qui surent ployer les bras des arcs-boutants,
Dont la solidité se raille
Des gifles de l'éclair et des griffes du temps ;
Tous ceux dont les doigts ciselèrent
Les grands portails du temple, et ceux qui révélèrent
Les traits mystérieux du Christ et des Élus,
Que le siècle va voir et qu'il ne comprend plus ;
Ceux qui semèrent de fleurs vives
Le vitrail tout en flamme au cadre des ogives
Ces royaux ouvriers et ces divins sculpteurs
Qui suspendaient au ciel l'abside solennelle,
Dont les ciseaux pieux criaient dans les hauteurs,
N'ont point gravé leur nom sur la pierre éternelle ;
Vous les avez couverts, poudre des parchemins !
Vous seules les savez, vierges aux longues mains !
Vous, dont les Jésus rient dans leurs barcelonnettes,
Artistes d'autrefois, où vous reposez-vous ?
Sous quelle tombe où l'on prie à genoux ?
Et vous, mains qui tendiez les nerfs des colonnettes,
Et vous, doigts qui semiez
De saintes le portail où nichent les ramiers,
Et qui, dans les rayons dont le soleil l'arrose,
Chaque jour encor faites s'éveiller
La rosace, immortelle rose
Que nul vent ne vient effeuiller !
Ô cathédrales d'or, demeures des miracles
Et des soleils de gloire échevelés autour
Des tabernacles
De l'amour !
Vous qui retentissez toujours de ses oracles,
Vaisseaux délicieux qui voguez vers le jour !
Vous qui sacrez les rois, grandes et nobles dames,
Qui réchauffez les cœurs et recueillez les âmes
Sous votre vêtement fait en forme de croix !
Vous qui voyez, ô souveraines,
La ville à vos genoux courber ses toits !
Vous dont les cloches sont, fières de leurs marraines,
Comme un bijou sonore à l'oreille des reines !
Vous dont les beaux pieds sont de marbre pur !
Vous dont les voiles
Sont d'azur !
Vous dont la couronne est d'étoiles !
Sous vos habits de fête ou vos robes de deuil,
Vous êtes belles sans orgueil !
Vous montez sans orgueil vos marches en spirales
Qui conduisent au bord du ciel,
Ô magnifiques cathédrales,
Chaumières de Jésus, Bethléem éternel !
Si longues, qu'un brouillard léger toujours les voile ;
Si douces, que la lampe y ressemble à l'étoile,
Les nefs aux silences amis,
Dans l'air sombre des soirs, dans les bancs endormis,
Comptent les longs soupirs dont tremble un écho chaste
Et voient les larmes d'or où l'âme se répand,
Sous l'œil d'un Christ qui semble, en son calvaire vaste,
Un grand oiseau blessé dont l'aile lasse pend.
Ah ! bienheureux le cœur qui, dans les sanctuaires,
Près des cierges fleuris qu'allument les prières,
Souvent, dans l'encens bleu, vers le Seigneur monta,
Et qui, dans les parfums mystiques, écouta
Ce que disent les croix, les clous et les suaires,
Et ce que dit la paix du confessionnal,
Oreille de l'amour que l'homme connaît mal !...
Avec sa grille étroite et son ombre sévère,
Ô sages, qui parliez autour du Parthénon,
Le confessionnal, c'est la maison de verre
À qui Socrate rêve et qui manque à Zénon !
Grandes ombres du Styx, me répondrez-vous: non ?...
Ce que disent les cathédrales,
Soit qu'un baptême y jase au bord des eaux lustrales,
Soit qu'au peuple, autour d'un cercueil,
Un orgue aux ondes sépulcrales
Y verse un vin funèbre et l'ivresse du deuil,
Soit que la foule autour des tables
S'y presse aux repas délectables,
Soit qu'un prêtre vêtu de blanc
Y rayonne au fond de sa chaise,
Soit que la chaire y tonne ou soit qu'elle se taise,
Heureux le cœur qui l'écoute en tremblant !
Heureux celui qui vous écoute,
Vagues frémissements des ailes sous la voûte !
Comme une clé qui luit dans un trousseau vermeil
Quand un rayon plus rouge aux doigts d'or du soleil
A clos la porte obscure au seuil de chaque église,
Quand le vitrail palpite au vol de l'heure grise,
Quand le parvis plein d'ombre éteint toutes ses voix,
Ô cathédrales, je vous vois
Semblables au navire émergeant de l'eau brune,
Et vos clochetons fins sont des mâts sous la lune ;
D'invisibles ris sont largués,
Une vigie est sur la hune,
Car immobiles, vous voguez,
Car c'est en vous que je vois l'arche
Qui, sur l'ordre de Dieu, vers Dieu s'est mise en marche ;
La race de Noé gronde encore dans vos flancs ;
Vous êtes le vaisseau des immortels élans,
Et vous bravez tous les désastres.
Car le maître est Celui qui gouverne les astres,
Le pilote, Celui qui marche sur les eaux...
Laissez, autour de vous, pousser aux noirs oiseaux
Leur croassement de sinistre augure ;
Allez, vous êtes la figure
Vivante de l'humanité ;
Et la voile du Christ à l'immense envergure
Mène au port de l'éternité.
Theo Mar 2019
her
i’ve left everything behind,
even my own pride.
i’ve done a lot of things,
unsightly and disgraceful,
yet I was forgiven.

her ability to let go,
her indulgent nature and clemency,
how could one forget,
someone as important as you?
the time you held my hand,
sparked feelings that were unfamiliar.
it was almost like bliss and grand;
euphoria that turned familiar.

i wasn’t prepared,
that our lips would touch.
at first i was scared,
i thought it was too much.
but instead,
i felt so deeply moved.
the weight in my heart,
was lifted.
and i felt,
something close to relief.

you freed me from my nightmares,
that i thought i’d never let go.
pulled me close to your cares,
as mesmerising as your trousseau.
seeing you in white
was a dream come true.
never have i ever thought,
that this day would come.

maybe i thought,
that forever is an overstatement.
but with you,
it’s nothing but an understatement.
the things that we could’ve done,
and the things that we didn’t do.
we’ll finally be able to.
hm
Bashir Ali Najar Nov 2018
I listen to cry of Mother
I gaze the sister lament !
My brother no more
The dream of being bride raze !!!!
Father mourn on the Carcass of son..
The Son Whom he used to talk at evening !!!
Close to day , Father watching the Son in the jaws of Death...
The granny's House ablaze !!
So burn mother's trousseau....
The birds nest have no more eggs!!!
No more grasshoppers hop in my fields...
No more children
No more hide and seek #
I hear no more ducks crook..
Along the Lakes *
The wind don't dare to gush !!!
Along the mount Pirpanjal
Autumn bewail
In my vale ...
Kurt Philip Behm May 2024
‘For thirty years, she called to me in a voice unclear. Today, a new pass leads me into the true magic of Shiprock.’


Insignificance:

Why was everything so big and I so small?  Why, from the very beginning, was the attraction so strong?  The closer I rode to what I thought I wanted the more insignificant I felt and the more important everything around me seemed to become.

Was it those things around me, or was it the missing parts from inside my spirit that grew larger in the vast emptiness of space and wonder? Stepping outside of myself in that Navajo Hogan, a vision that Bearheart had foretold years before, allowed me to take that first step back — back inside a self that was prepared to greet me and call me by my real name.

I see my old self in the false images of things that I once thought mattered … things that clouded my sight and kept me from becoming who I was meant to be.  

Today, the great Shiprock monument looms ahead and checking the mileage I know I must be getting close.  The old cowboy expression of Riding For Days, But The Mountain Gets No Bigger hits home to me now. She sits alone in a sea of desert, and I feel her presence before seeing her image.  It’s easy to understand why the Navajo worshipped here, and no life was complete without a pilgrimage to stand inside her great shadow. No matter how much this mountain road twists and climbs, the eyes of Shiprock stay focused on me.

Small in my footprint, but growing larger in my understanding, I feel more important and part of this place. This is new and replaces the empty awestruck detachment I had always felt when passing through here before.  There are no small connections when timeless majesty reaches out to you, small is a term that we use to qualify others — and ourselves.
                              
The Navajo Nation, with its flat arid landscape and towering monuments, is a timeless reminder of how low most of us dwell. Until we feel our true connection, we are indeed small and isolated from the Great Mystery — and any chance at rebirth.  

Like much of the West, there is a magic here that is felt only in its presence. To become its visitor again honors me if only for the shortest time.  I finally realize that by taking nothing, I am given everything, as the ancient spirit of Shiprock embeds itself deeply inside me.  Some things only become real in your understanding of them and their acceptance, and before leaving, I stop the bike to look at the ancient Petroglyph wall that faces East.

The Kachina figures come alive and dance for my amusement, and I strain hard to hear the music and what the chanters are trying to say. In silence, I walk closer and hear a voice speaking: “Who Is Really The Ancient One On This Wall Of Renewal?”

As I watch Mudman move across the rock, I feel everything that I knew before change inside me.

In an epiphanic awareness, I point the bike north toward the high country.  I’ve been in the desert for four days, and I can hear the mountains of Colorado calling my name. The desert never says goodbye as you wander higher. Time and temperature will bring you back knowing that her light is always on. Like a faithful mistress, she watches you leave knowing that you must. Her trousseau is richer than before you came, and she is content in the knowledge that your betrothal is secure.

Darkness fell, as I pulled the bike into South Fork Colorado. Neither working town nor ski resort, it is the perfect waystop for a traveler like me.  I walk my nightly ritual along her one road, my shadow the only connection between tomorrow and yesterday.  In the waning light, I see the figure of Mudman again on the east side of the mountain. As he dances, he pulls the last rays of today’s sun onto my pathway ahead.

Walking back to the lodge the temptation to reach up and touch the stars fills me with the wonder of being so high, and the sky becomes a canopy of new light. Alone beneath the Milky Way, and wrapped in the marvelous insignificance that only a day like this day could inspire, my heart is at rest.    

In bed that night, I wonder about the contrast between the desert and mountains. Feeling like a piece of thread — I travel through the eye of their needle — looking for that one stitch that will keep me married to them both. I try to keep them connected in the tatters of my conflicted wandering. If forced to choose between the two, I choose not to.  One cannot exist without the other — and neither can I.

I am thankful tonight to be a tiny speck of humanity within creations bounty, blessed to have at least one eye open to more than myself.  As my one eye gives thanks, my other eye remembers how short my duration is with the moments fleeting to embrace the little time being offered me.  

This morning, I left Canyon de Chelly by a route I had never traveled before.  The main canyon road was closed because of mud, and my detour took me high over a pass I had never seen or read about.  It was newly paved, and the grade was higher than I thought the bike could make.  It was called Wolf’s Tooth Pass, and I’ve not found it on any map or atlas.  A good friend, who lives nearby, swears it doesn’t exist.   All I can say is that from the top, where Arizona and New Mexico meet, Shiprock called out to me in the distance. And in the importance of her calling — I stopped asking why!


Kurt Philip Behm: August, 1999
Sibifus parable of the Light: “in a dark box was Sibufus, under a vile phoneme of resistance as the Hellenic soldiers prepared to attack and redouble the efforts of a final counterattack. Sibufus was enraptured by a maiden named Artemis in whom he took refuge, she molded with her hands the lanterns of the night with the lamps of lychnos that pierced the soul of Sibifus and her gaze when Artemis was exasperated listening to her exclaim in the thickest darkness, in a hiss in the form of words, images and strict shadows, which he romanticized in all those who wandered with Lychnos at night, concealing his offspring and finding hemispheres of day and night in a plane of darkness. Artemis not being sleepy at night, became angry with the goddess Nix, snatching a dream with mead from her and depositing him in the palace at night, but in darkness, confusing the dream with creative and fantasy death with Sibifus, of which he is locked in a box near the visions that hit Artemis's window. In the hinges that glistened when he tried to open them, shades of gloom shared in the native darkness making little chance of being close to each other, Sibifus was always condemned to a romanticism presided over by the imprisonment of his voice, but if he could whistle, Artemis enjoyed his freedom when he went out to observe him through the window of every spring. Sometimes the Thuellai would stop flowing, she being able to bring her eardrums closer to the tones, when he whistled with splendor, magnifying himself many times to reach his court, when he often told him to feel sad because the world was aging him, remaining within his whistles cast on a young night. When Artemis listened to him, believing that she felt him ..., sometimes she answered him with the sighs of an infant running through the Aristotelian teachings, of which they were always late, but with great courage from his high spirit that awaited him from his rose window, knowing very well little that awaited him, although the darkness of the night was hidden behind the messages of his phonemes and whistles, frequently in his poor heart that was encouraged in locution for something better, to see the new face and voice of Sibifus, but nowhere Capitol fire that made him understand his words crossed with uncrossed whistles. Until from the underworld the voice of Sibifus emerged making everything reality together with his real voice, whistling and singing as many times as necessary, so that his seduced could hear him and no evil would extend a lost whistle, less to a voice exonerated from crying by the darkness of the night. Something of littleness in his neuroanatomy automated him from a loving language through the streets of discernment that he learned with melodic frequency between monodies of hemispheres cut by the edge of his voice, but not from a hiss, denouncing in him capacities of cortical dysplasia that diagnosed him of maleficent gray substance of his cortex, leaving him at the mercy of an epilepsy, which always and in all the will of the ceremonial in Sibifus recurred. In dualities they bathed in the ceremonial of ablution and holy water, known as loutra, always prowling all the skies and lavender fields of Patmos, with Minoans whistling in the distance of Darkness and in a night of devotion, in a Lutrophor that from a vessel that circulated from hand to hand and that brought them water for their nuptial bath, Sibufus making a mistake, taking it through the orbit of the funerals and the regional area, instead of going for their nuptial trousseau, being imprisoned one of the other in his celibacy, which later was transferred into the Loutra with his hands, and Sibufus as well, but fertilizing himself in the sounds of a whistle beyond the light and the first layer of the earth, not being able to hear them in a low voice, or in full darkness that from afar seems to call them "

(Prócoro, takes their hands one with another and begins to return to his cell, letting the monosyllables of the night be silenced and carry him beyond the darkness, losing himself in the sounds that were moving away from him. The night is silent, but emits whistles that speak of love that nothing and no one understands, and less remotely from where the light will come)
Sibifus parable of the Light:
Abeer Dec 2023
a trousseau, vailed bride
the summer sunshine, friends
butterscotch ice cream, expensive wine,
a friendly dog inches apart, a creepy aunt
a chocolate fountain. Some childish jokes
a heartfelt speech, heart-bound love,
pulled aside by the groom, for hugs and laughs
being very sweet, softly they hold my hand
recharging the social battery, enjoying the back
socializing with fearless child, in way better clothes
at the end, kisses to all who could take
left with nothing but the sweet envy
for a wedding day
Kurt Philip Behm Aug 2018
The kingdom of knowledge
  to its crown we are wed

Its light our betrothal
  its heavens our bed

The words ever regal
  trousseau not to beg

Thus will it be written
  —thus will it be said

(Villanova Pennsylvania: June, 2016)
Kurt Philip Behm Jan 2020
I’m wed to my Poetry,
betrothed to the fire

Each word an incendiary,
burned to inspire

My voice the rekindling,
fueling the scream

The ashes my trousseau
—a smoldering dream

(Bryn Mawr College: January, 2020)

— The End —