Black Squirrels in
the Dooryard
They seemed fit
for Mirkwood, these black squirrels
At the feeder,
biting at birds in snarling quarrels,
And no
ornithomancer worth their bones could fail
To read portents
in the ravening, rampant travail.
Sciurids dark as
caverns, gorging on safflower,
Torrid in hunger
and in a desperate hour,
Means famine,
a Fimbulwinter of ceaseless dearth
That drives the
beasts from their shadowy berths,
And quails the
gamesome light-feathered flocks
Into scattered
subdual, pointless pecking of rocks.
Here are no
creatures frost-winter fattening,
Nor leisurely
grazing, but straight seed battening
Into the gullets,
as if the apocalypse were starting
In the fur of
their tenebrous tails, sun-blotting
Like clouds of
locusts from the smoke of Abaddon,
Until swarming
with seed-lust they cover the lawn.
Tipping their ebon
caps, the chickadees flee
And the nuthatches
spill their craven speech,
That once Sigurd
heard, his heart’s blood pounding.
Scattered shells, hard-bitten,
in the yellow mounding
Grass are all
that’s left of their famished massacre,
Shrill scraps for
the midden found centuries after.
Small wonder that
later the seasons come so cold,
Scant of acorns,
of birdsong, empty promises of old.
The
Pomptine marshes with their legions
Of
flies, the skiffs that drift in slow repose
Hauled
by mules through mallow reeds,
Where
Syrinx hides her charms from Pan,
And
the thick-thighed bargemen of Appius,
Croaking
drunkenly for their lost loves
In
time with the crickets and frogs,
All
summon you to mind, Ferryman.
While
others will drop their obols
Into
your silent boat at the last minute,
I
settle my debts far in advance.
Before
your eyes effulgent, bowed neck,
Or
your hoary beard drift into view
Through
the fen-mucked mists, before
I
catch myself panicked and wayward,
Slipping
on the muddy banks of Acheron,
Let
me pay my offering. No budding kid,
Slit
in forest glade with the priestess’s knife,
Hailing
Faunus and his hoof-footed beasts,
Nor
fatted oxen skewered with golden blade
On
the altar of Neptune’s salt-sea temples,
Nor
sweet-smelling frankincense, stimulating
Cypris
as she roves through the sacred fields
Of
Tamasus, anathema to the mephitic coves
You
row by instinct.
For
the drear of a lightless domain suits you
Best,
stagnant waters that breed pestilence,
Teeming
with unseen leeches starving,
Toilsome
trafficking of the dazed dead,
Whose
numbers are never none. And
When
war and famine strike, how laden
Your
craft, how even the weightless shades
Crowd
and caterwaul over the gravity
Of
their impending situation.
No
sprinkling of stars, no moon, no beacon,
But
darkness upon darkness, where the crows
That
feast on the fallen follow them
Into
the underworld, and blacken further
The
murky air and Stygian shadows.
Choleric
Charon, who refused Xanthias,
But
suffered in adamantine chains
Infernal
imprisonment for Hercules
Barging
his way into Tartarus,
It
is clear that craven Eros avoids you.
For
Psyche, once your pretty fare,
Sought
fruitlessly for him through the grim
Channels
and dismal lands of the fallen.
Listen,
then, to mortal advice,
Before
fear and trembling steal my voice.
Whenever
next you guide the one
For
whom abysmal Hades cleft the earth,
Persephone
in her queenly robes,
Dyed
purple with pomegranate,
Beseech
her with your lonely tongue
To
do you service when she returns above
To
her meadows pied and air purified,
Cavorting
again with the daughters
Of
Tethys: streamlined Galaxaura,
Boyish
Chryseis, Tyche and Electra,
Or
Melobosis plucking crocuses.
Claim
one of the Heleonomi,
Adorers
of swamps and quagmires:
Phasida,
with her pale Naiad skin,
Reddened
ever with mosquito welts.
Even
better, slow-moving Marica,
Enchantress
of the brackish Liris,
Or
luminescent Limnoreia, who haunts
The
saltmarshes aglow, and lures lost
Souls
for pleasure, seducing with her
Dancing,
drowning vapors. No strangers
To
scum and slime, these Hydriades
Would
scarce be appalled at the viscid
Furnishings
of Orcus.
Ghastly
Styx in her silver caverns perhaps
Misses
spear-slinging Pallas, and craves
Expanding
her horde of night-suckled gods,
Cratus
and Nike, Zelus and Bia, favoured
Of
Jove. Or if the oath-maker balks,
Try
Eione, that Nereid fond of sea-strands,
Like
you drawn to littoral pleasures,
Or
Dexamene, strong enough to paddle your oar.
Benthic
Ceto already looks fondly on
Sea-monsters,
and dwells in the deep ink
Of
the ocean. I have heard Acheron himself
Lies
with caliginous Orphne in abyssal pits
And
tenebrous bowers. And a lesser
Ferryman,
Phaon, it is said, once kindled
Bittersweet
burning in Sappho, poet
Whose
passions made even the gods blush.
You
are older but sturdy, still striking
In
appearance, and no nymph would find
A
deity more dependable, who has nothing
But
time on his hands.
And
when your consort skims alongside
Stirring
the fetid pools, or clambers over
Your
gunwales, embracing your ragged
Bones,
think kindlier on those you have
Inherited
as freight because of Love’s
Killing
shafts. Pilot them to happier fields,
For
I no doubt will be among them.
Born of the wailing river, your
suitors were
Never many. Ceaseless grief and gurgling
Lamentations were no aphrodisiac,
Even in Tartarus, and the hard iron
Chambers of Aidoneus came as relief
And incitement. Furtive at first,
always
In darkness, you only kissed him
timidly,
The way a blind cavefish puckers
against
Submerged stones. But the underworld king
Was sick of shadows, disencumbered
From flesh, stripped by blood-soaked
Keres,
And soon, Mintha, he pressed his
raven lips
Against your lips, and turned your
Naiad
Nibbles into a devouring. How the shades
Of Hades envied your comings and
goings,
New moans along the banks of
Cocytus.
How could one who had held your
throat
So firmly, slid his tongue so
deeply, ridden
You with such violence, ever have
sought
Another warm body for his bed? And yet,
There she was one day. Fresh from meadows
Decked with violets and hyacinth,
lupin
And forget-me-nots, Proserpina
enthroned.
She lacked your firmness, but her
shape
Was comely, her eyes an inescapable
indigo,
And her hair like a dark fire,
purple flame.
Still, you haunted the palace of
Dis, waited
For him to tire of her luster. And word was
She would not be long for the
underworld.
Who could blame you for pointing out
her
Defects, or for storming through
Avernus,
Decrying the queen of hell? Her lord
still
Had scratches of love down his back
From your indelicate nails.
But your complaints escaped the
earth, vented
Through fissures and catacombs,
spewed
As lava from winds cyclonic beneath
the marl
Of Aetna. There Ceres lingered
still,
Incensed already at the rape and enthrallment
Of her daughter. No surprise, then,
When the corn-crowned goddess
stamped out
Your jealous cries, and with
reverberation
Sent them back to the source, a
sonic blast
That billowed the stagnant Styx and
crumbled
The caverns of Acheron, grinding you
to dust,
Chalky and dry, easily swept aside.
Pluto’s bride felt pity enough,
transforming
And casting you forth all at once,
her husband
Unflinching as you penetrated the
upper world
Green-leafed, rhizomes creeping
under soil.
Now at Plutonian gates, where the
noxious
Breath of Cerberus exhales killing
mists,
Sweet-smelling mint ever combats those
Infernal fumes. And the Temple at Pylos
welcomes you, inviolate and inextirpable.
Eric Brown is Professor of English at the University of Maine Farmington. His publications include the books Milton on Film and Insect Poetics as well as essays on Renaissance literature, film adaptation, and animal studies. His poems have recently appeared or are forthcoming in The Ekphrastic Review, Carmina Magazine, and The Frogmore Papers (shortlisted for the 2023 Frogmore Poetry Prize).
These three poems are part of a longer project reimagining the lost verses of Helvius Cinna
(85-44 BCE), a contemporary of Catullus.
Truly brilliant work. As delicate as the down of a swan’s feather loosened by Zeus’s passion and as hard as a blow from Hercules’s Golden Mace of adamantine.
ReplyDeleteWonderful!