The Reflection from a
Million Mirrors Shattering
Introduction
Long
past and far away, I came for me.
I
had this fever with unimaginable imaginings of me, of every me.
For
I am but the reflection from a million mirrors shattering, fortunate, and
cursed.
Incompatible
with nuance, confused by misunderstanding, I cannot find my way.
I
realize what is and is not, and with sadness, I fear I cannot be.
In
dreams of displeasure, falling Angels unfamiliar to themselves call to me.
I
simmer in the distance awaiting the things to come.
One
Eclipsed
by inconsistency, where do I flee?
Prometheus,
his biceps bulging, calls me, “She will see you now.”
Then
with a sorrowful grin, he adds, “I wish you luck.”
I
never move.
Nevertheless,
I am fumbling through existence, and everything reappears before it appears.
I
stumble from a claustrophobic fury and find myself on a peaceful shore,
warm
with satisfying waves.
I
shout to the sun to stay above me, bathe me in nourishment,
but
my voice is corralled before vocalization.
The
sun becomes the moon, the shoreline a flowering valley between high peaks.
The
wind brings on a chill.
Nothing
has meaning, just insistence, a persistent heart beats without remorse.
Wrapped
into circles, circling, I plod through awareness.
Daffodils,
buttercups, and marigolds cushion my fall.
I
always wanted to be where I was going, beyond thought, beyond thinking,
beyond
where essence and madness dissolve.
Two
False
images charm as metaphors slither, but a cavalier vibrancy sweeps them away
from
a cascading sky.
Hera
spies on herself, uncovering all pretence.
I
am getting nearer to where there is only stillness.
Above
me, on a cloud made of soft, soothing textures, Gods enjoy
what
they had forgotten they desired.
They
cannot see me; I must be known to myself before I can be known to them.
I
am an impression of myself, a clue about to be revealed.
Something
sculptured from marble, painted on canvas, or words on paper.
A
cacophony of misty bewilderment swirls and thunder sounds,
yet
the bright blue sky remains silent.
Nothing
has a voice, and what can be understood is unremarkable.
That
astuteness needed, that delicate, varied, and dimensional aliveness
only
fate can deliver, is still evolving.
Three
Charon,
the ferryman across the river Styx, asks me to board.
His
emotions are alive on another’s face.
He
looks past what is to what must be.
With
large muscular arms on his oar, he says, “Justice is a human creation.”
He
hands me a two-headed black and yellow lizard,
he
quips, “I use her to navigate the unfolding of hypocrisy. Trust her when
Poseidon interferes on your journey into doubt.”
Four
Thetis,
the future mother of Achilles,
tells
me as she has defended Zeus, she will guide me into the domain
I
most covet to be.
Her
breasts are heavy, and I begin to drink.
She
is all the women I have known and desired.
When
I have consumed my fill, she wipes my mouth,
swallows
the lizard, and spreads her long legs.
All
mythology is a concept I am creating.
Thetis’
vaginal lips bring me inside her, and the warm moistness blesses me.
There
is no absence within her womb, and benevolent sleep
lasts
before time and after existence.
My
journey has begun.
Five
DaVinci
is lying back, his hands behind his head.
He
envisions Camus writing, “L’Etranger.”
He
gazes at me, then sits up, asking, “Are you the one who knows why?”
I
am mystified at the sprinkling of actual thought permeating his presence.
Naked
and alive without encumbrance, I ask, “Am I here?”
His
laughter is so loud, long, and innocent small birds gather within
and
make nests.
They
chirp without fear of being,
and
their song develops into a theme Mozart would capture
in
a time absent at the moment.
Finally,
after several stars become languid moments of belief,
he
responds, “No, Plato’s forms are yet to have boundaries.”
Torches
appear, and poetic words determine my direction.
Venus,
on a swing, glides past above me.
I
try to reach for her, but I lose my narrative.
She
melts into the skyline, an illusory dreaminess tinged with impending storms.
Six
In
me, not that me, but this me defined by a perfectionistic ideology for being
fills
my curious persona.
“It
is time,” laments DaVinci.
Prometheus
puts the dice in my mind and into my hand.
All
love affairs come to mind, all triumphs come to mind, and risk comes to mind.
Expressionless
faces stare, mythological figures, fictional characters, and Gods in their
finery,
relentless
in their depth, view landscapes of the soul I may be given.
There
is nothing, not even gloom, yet I remain unbroken.
Seven
No
sounds are heard, though sad music plays, a dirge full of suspense.
Sjöfn,
the Nordic goddess of love, nude and seductive, demands I kneel.
She
wraps her legs tightly around my neck and places her sword on my lips.
Irrational
within a paradox, a dispute about myself escapes from a tragedy
into
an inquisitional quandary.
The
crowd does not appear in an arena that does not exist,
yet
the roar gains momentum, “Roll the dice.”
The
eyes of Prometheus become flames.
The
lizard hisses, she knows the problem is tenderness, not fear.
Eight
The
dice tumble, tumble, and turn.
They
bounce.
Dots
are lines, dots are blurs, and dots are deciders.
Hera
leads the procession, and Aphrodite follows.
One
die twirls, the other winds around, the shouting is frenzied.
Sjofn,
so blonde, so fair, so perfect, so icy, just giggles,
a
tinkling, devilish snicker, as nightfall overtakes darkness,
and
nightmares overtake dreams.
The
dice roll, they roll.
I
confess I am nameless.
Rainbows
of words cloud my view.
That
is when I realize I will forever be wandering within a storm,
this
two-fisted tempest and the next, and the next.
Nine
Athena,
understanding complexity is a pleasure,
never
a burden, immediately removes the numbers from the dice.
A
herd of magnificent multicoloured mares gallops past.
They
blend into abstraction- a painting, a symphony, and a poem.
Everything
past is a memory of the future.
Ten
Charon’s
ferry slowly leaves the cold waters for the negative after-image of eternity.
When
my lizard crawls from the soft womb of Thetis, it has another head, red and crimson.
This
head devours the others, and the lizard is furious about its demise.
It
digs its claws into my thoughts.
And
I, uncertain about my self-awareness
but
knowing imagination is reason courting fantasy,
disappear.
Philip Butera received his Masters's Degree in Psychology from Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada. He has published four books of poetry, Mirror Images and Shards of Glass, Dark Images at Sea, I Never Finished Loving You, and Falls from Grace, Favor, and High Places. His fifth, Forever Was Never On My Mind, will be out Summer of 2023. Two novels, Caught Between (Which is also a 24 episodes Radio Drama Podcast https://wprnpublicradio.com/caught-between-teaser/) and Art and Mystery: The Missing Poe Manuscript. His next novel, an erotic thriller, Far From Here, will be out Fall of 2023. One play, The Apparition. His current project is collaborating with a British photographer, a French artist, and an American graphic artist to produce a coffee table book in praise of Women. Philip also has a column in the quarterly magazine Per Niente. He enjoys all things artistic.
Man… that is some intellectual poetry…
ReplyDeleteThank-you. Hopefully, Lothlorien, will publish more of my poetry
Deletebrillian i can relate to that like its some sub conscious imagery
ReplyDeleteI love blending the abstract and literal.
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