After The Ball
   The dancing over,
   masks long since discarded,
   woman curved in sleeping
   disarray upon the bed,
   he shrugs into a dressing gown
   and walks out on the balcony.
   The city, in its own disarray,
   is also sleeping. He hears
   a single car around the corner
   and then, surprisingly, the clip-
   clop of a ridden horse.
   It should be dawn, he thinks,
   by now it should be dawn.
   The sky, however, shows
   no sign of lightening.
   The stars still shine.
   He smiles, amused:
   it should be dawn
   but equally, he thinks,
   he should know the name
   of the woman in his bed
   and he does not.
   A light breeze lifts the leaves
   of the oaks below. He gathers
   the robe more closely about himself,
   enjoying the feel of it
   against his skin. The robe
   is navy blue with silver trim.
   Nicolette. Her name is Nicolette.
   The horse comes back
   along the boulevard:
   a chestnut ridden by a man in grey.
   He hears from below the voices
   of two young girls walking past.
   His head turns reflexively
   to follow them up the hill:
   a meaningless motion of desire
   like a roulette wheel
   after the ball has dropped.
   PART
   THREE
   Guinevere at Almesbury
   The hooded ladies here are wonderfully kind.
   They have been gentle since the day
   I first arrived, and even more so since the night
   a messenger came riding through the rain
   to say the king was dead.
   They brought me shears and watched
   in silence as I destroyed my hair.
   A circling hawk cried once and flew away
   into the trees. Will anyone believe
   in days to come how much I loved my husband?
   I sat awake that night beneath
   the dripping leaves, then under the quiet stars
   that came out after the rain moved on.
   The garden here has mild-hued flowers
   and large-leafed trees for shade.
   In the morning and at dusk songbirds
   send sweet music through the air.
   I am learning how to live without desire.
   When Lancelot came here from France
   to be the hunting hawk to Arthur’s hand
   I watched myself falling into love
   and lay down at night hiding it.
   I learned. I laid a naked sword
   along my mind to bar him from my centre,
   smiling with all proper courtesy
   upon him, as on every man at court
   until we were caused to be once
   alone. I was made to see his own mask
   crumble, baring the brilliant pain behind.
   I could not hide from that.
   There was no place to hide.
   I was brought into another life
   and began to live with grief,
   for Arthur knew. He knew me as he knew
   each single star that swung about like
   pointers to his north. I heard the silence
   of his soul beside me in the dark
   and his forbearance broke
   my heart, for I loved him.
   Will anyone believe, in days to come,
   how much? I loved them both.
   For my hair, now cropped and ragged,
   all that bright aspiring
   was sundered and sent to war.
   I am learning how to live with this.
   I thought of dying more than once.
   The last time, the night that Arthur died.
   Not since. We cannot be other than
   we are. I loved two men. A kingdom
   broke for it. Something fell that was a star.
   We cannot be other than we are.
   I never dream of one of them alone.
   I see them on a forest path,
   riding together. Dappled, autumn
   leaves, a slanting sun just risen.
   Or in battle side by side
   with bloodied swords,
   in the hard north. Or talking
   a winter night away beside a fire
   in a kingdom that has not fallen.
   In those dreams I was never in Camelot.
   That pain is worst of all.
   Those images wake me, shivering,
   needing comfort, knowing there is none,
   except for this: they are not true.
   Dreams are not always true.
   It was for me, it was for me,
   it was for love of me that Camelot
   became what once it was.
   Lacking Guinevere, there is nothing there.
   And what I let make, I let destroy.
   I will die someday. I loved them both.
   At The Root of Her Tree
   The people of my village
   await your next coming.
   They perform songs
   and complex dances
   to commemorate visitations
   and implore a swift return.
   The last time, you appeared to us
   in the shape of a soft-winged bird
   that sang a summer
   in the wood beyond our houses.
   The time before that
   you came as a woman.
   You gave yourself in love
   to my father and bore him
   a child in midwinter.
   You named your son
   and were gone
   in the morning.
   So I have been told.
   I grew up without you.
   Changeling, talisman:
   guarded with care,
   loved and feared.
   I was never allowed
   to fight in our wars.
   Women, ever since I can remember,
   would bring their warriors’ weapons
   and their newborn children
   for me to touch. Later, they began
   to come for themselves.
   One night in that summer
   when my mother
   came to us as a bird,
   I went into the forest.
   The night was mild.
   A sky spilled with stars
   hung above me. One fell
   to the world, somewhere.
   Moving under grey-green leaves
   I came to where my mother
   was still singing. I saw her
   on the branch of a moonlit tree.
   Her wings were silver in the light.
   Her head was tilted back. Her voice
   soared above the forest,
   the tilled and fallow fields,
   all the curvature of earth.
   In that creature
   of uncompromising joy
   what thought could there be
   for a human child
   begotten one green year
   for who knows why?
   I listened for a woven time,
   and then lay down
   at the root of her tree to sleep.
   In the morning I went
   back into the village
   and learned that a woman
   had borne my child in the night.
   I came to the place where she was
   and took the infant in my arms,
   carefully. I held it close
   to my beating heart and,
   bending my stiff head down slowly,
   let its triumphant crying
   drown the singing of my mother
   in the deep, surrounding woods.
   Goddess
   You, love, are of the sea.
   Your unfathomed tides coil
 &nbs 
					     					 			p; through circled mysteries to hold
   those who always were to come.
   To you, love, we carry the sun.
   Suspensions of laughter we give you,
   moons over summer-still waters,
   and the whispers that consecrate shadow,
   turning away from the living
   with inadequate words
   as offerings in our arms.
   Will you not show yourself?
   Over the blurred edges of dreams
   cried by carried need you,
   ravagingly distant, shimmer,
   re-opening the unhealed wound.
   Words unspoken linger
   longer than the spoken
   in the unwhole heart.
   You, love, are ocean cruel
   knowing (you knowing) that once
   having almost seen your face
   or half-heard a half-promising voice
   in what is unlocked between seconds,
   we are star lost and sun lost,
   consumed by a wanting
   of more than chimeras,
   helplessly sculpted by you.
   Being Orpheus
   What else could he have done?
   Her steps were silent on the stone.
   He could not speak or turn, he could not
   Turn. Could not see if silence
   Wrapped her rising with him.
   The road shrank upwards; light was far away.
   Somewhere below, two figures watched in shadow.
   But were they watching two ascend, or one?
   Were those her footsteps that he could not hear?
   Behind him was a god who never stained himself
   With mercy. Light was a long way off.
   What would he do if in the end
   He turned under the sun and was alone?
   And somewhere then, behind all mysteries,
   Where magic had its source, where
   Sorcery was woven and the gods were born,
   A song began. A song of mourning and lament,
   Of sorrow not assuaged in all the years
   That, following, towered into time.
   Being Orpheus. A song of loss to break
   The hearts of beasts, to break the grip
   Of earth on stone, to bend the starlight
   Streaming to the world.
   Light was so far ahead it was a prayer,
   And the only god who mattered was behind.
   He could not speak. Silence was the law
   Through his contracting universe.
   But still there grew a music,
   Spinning itself down within his making,
   In places where he did not know he was.
   A lament that was crying for a sorrow yet unborn,
   Sorrow that might not be unless he turned.
   And yet the rocks would break, the trees.
   The silence was a weight upon his life.
   He could not speak to curse but
   Knew he had no curse to speak
   For he had won. Had turned his eyes
   Without and walked a world to ending
   To stand before a god and sing her back
   To life. Being Orpheus. He could not
   Love her more. Had followed, living,
   Into ways where life was not.
   He could not love her more.
   The silence was a weight upon all life.
   If he could reach back for her hand,
   Back to touch her robe, a strand of hair,
   If he could know.
   And somewhere now there was a song.
   With words of loss to gather even Sirens
   Into stillness and the harrowing of grief,
   And a music that had never been before.
   A music that had never been before.
   Somewhere, twice, the phoenix tried to scream.
   There was an agony of silence, a plague.
   We turned. There was light. I saw her eyes.
   And what choice had been his?
   Or ours, who followed after?
   None of us could reach behind ourselves,
   And when the breaking light came blindingly
   How could we not turn, for whom
   The sacrifice had long ago been made?
   Sacrificed and having sacrificed,
   we came into what appeared to be sunshine.
   There seemed to be a clearing, trees and rocks.
   There was a lyre. And somehow our hands moved,
   or seemed to move, and then we sang.
   Because there once had been
   a song of grief, of mourning and lament,
   of sorrow not assuaged in all the years
   that, following, towered into time.
   Because there once had been
   a music that had never been before.
   What else could we have done? Once being Orpheus.
   This Falling Tower
   ‘To see things clear, if even through your tears, to
   recognize, notice, observe—and have to put it all
   down with a smile at the very moment when hands are
   clinging and lips meeting, and the human gaze is
   blinded with feeling . . .’
   —Thomas Mann
   Your love goes in silver under the moon.
   She robes herself in gold beneath the sun.
   When she moves through darkness, she gathers
   about herself a blackness of the first night.
   She whirls within the room, turning about the floor,
   her hair spinning into circles. You know this music.
   But watching from the balcony
   you are frozen into stillness,
   while images shiver through you into life.
   Chandeliers are dancing on the glass,
   your love is wrapped in scintillating hues,
   the room is turning, she is turning, you
   are motionless and cold, and line
   by line you draw them to a stop.
   In that porcelain tableau the whiteness of her
   skin springs outward like starlight. They stand.
   Details record themselves. Time passes,
   does not seem to pass. You feel your pulse return
   to seek the music in the room. Light moves,
   as you step inside and take her hand.
   And take her hand and think, and always think,
   of porcelain and chandeliers, of stars
   and wind and the night before the sun.
   You dance. The obligatory distance
   breaks your heart. You love this woman,
   dance with her across a ballroom floor,
   she whispers in your ear, glittering.
   But even now you can turn to the window
   and watch yourself watching both of you.
   On that balcony, outside the splendour
   of the spinning room, someone
   with your name can almost smile,
   and someday in a room that is waiting now
   you will work with words to build a falling tower.
   Your love has eyes in which a soul can drown,
   or be revived. Write it down.
   This Truth
   Nothing compares.
   Though we be
   bound backwards
   across the spinning
   wheel, though our
   stone words
   never ascend
   the slope to you,
   and though
   your face
   is never shown
   clearly to us,
   dreaming or awake—
   though this truth
   be bitter truth,
   nothing compares
   to almost you.
   Medea
   I wanted the man who came on the blood ship.
   They came for the treasure of my father.
   (Not I.) I stole it for them
   and sailed away on that ship.
   At sea, with the black wine unstopped,
   I unbound my hair and wrapped
   
					     					 			; my legs about him as he drove,
   breaking what I was. My blood was on
   his cloak. Triumph sang, sang.
   After that we were every night together,
   sliding past lands familiar as stars
   to them, but strange as love to me.
   He taught me to do the things
   he needed to have done.
   When my father’s fleet in swift pursuit
   appeared behind us like a stain at sea,
   racing to regain his golden treasure
   (Not I. My hair is dark, dark.),
   it was easy to think of the death of
   my brother, Apsyrtos, whom we had
   carried off with us, and certain things
   followed upon that. The pieces
   of his body flecked the choppy sea
   until my father stopped to harvest them.
   And so he let us go: the fleece on the mast, and I.
   I watched their drooping sails shrink behind.
   Jason watched the birds feed on the waves,
   standing straight as a man, stiffly apart from me.
   He slept alone that night and so I slept alone.
   Later we were wed, blessed with children.
   But I should not have been left by myself
   that night to learn the things I learned.
   Various Things
   I am the child of a full eclipse.
   When I was born the sun
   was blocked by the moon.
   I have a propensity for alleyways.
   The women I have allowed myself
   to love have been uniformly dark.
   One night a girl asked me to hurt her.
   Later, I went down into the street.
   Long before dawn. The city very cold.
   No moon. Stars hard and far. A solitary
   drunk approached me, singing
   to himself. I let him pass.
   I have never kept a job
   for more than half a year.
   Various things. I am not
   particularly responsible.
   Now that winter is coming
   I am more content than at other times.
   In summer I would not have let him go.
   Hades and Kore
   I have stolen maidens from their mothers’ sides.
   The brutal rose I wear in my lapel
   has petals that do not fade. Young girls
   have seen my walk and followed me away
   from their annihilating lives,
   the rag dolls they have scarcely left behind
   slumped forebodingly in brightly empty rooms,
   as bodies that once cradled them were opened.
   I have lingered over cigarettes,
   taken girls telling me their fantasies
   in twilit motel rooms creased by neon
   urgencies, on the ragged edges
   of whatever grainbelt town or city