Tuesday, 19 March 2024

Dream of the Longest Night To Egypt - Prose Poem By Greg Patrick




Dream of the Longest Night To Egypt

Prose Poem


By Greg Patrick

  

“All men dream:  but not equally.  Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake up in the day to find it was vanity, but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, to make it possible.” – T.E. Lawrence of Arabia

 

The ensnared falcon tried to rise against the tether. Wings beating futilely and shrill cries

of protest. For what living thing born free can suffer to be caged? With keen far-sighted

gaze a rare albino falcon languishes in the confines of a Pharaoh’s cage when its birthright

of the skies beckon like its own shrill song in echo. Every fibre of its being yearns for the

sun-lit skies to take wing, its folded pent wings restlessly embracing captivity, outgrown

like a cocoon, its shell cannot withhold change. Wings that cannot uplift smite the cage and

heart that cannot bend, feathers falling like a son god’s tears. The falconer dares not voice

the council to liberate the untamed thing. He knows the truly free die in captivity .How

much to ransom freedom? The price of blood, the sacrifice for defiance?

 

When eve has fallen, and none bears vigil the falconer opens the cage like a forbidden box. He

croons to the raptor softly in his banned native tongue to calm it. It climbs the length of his arm

crossways and he bears the falcon on his forearm and severs the tether like an umbilical

chord with the earthbound. Their bond now is of the gods and skies. The gaze and bejewelled

eyes behold the heights, their depths reflect the heights. Like a nomad pavilion flame in a desert

lion’s eyes the stars smoulder. He strides among the sacred flames to the threshold of the throne

room. The promise of the skies awaits. The eyes of the falcon reflect and microcosm the stars till

they shine of their own fires.  

 

Like an Alexandrian lighthouse beam their allure seem as if lights guiding nomad and mariner

 

homeward. Not drawn to a mirage but a substance and depth few could envision for they saw

with heart as well as mind. The braziers were over-turned and from the pyre the falcon soared

aloft like a phoenix of  Scheherazadian lore, like the soul of a slain warrior rising from his

immolation. Like a portal of fire the threshold seems lit.

 

The writhing flames illuminate the hieroglyphs the timeless words of wisdom

and dreams. The paintings of the gods lit in eerie resplendence. The falcon’s fire-lit gaze delves

into his own, searchingly then turns to the heights. The falcon’s wings flex like a warrior before

battle, head poised and tensed before its wings flutter like the desert wind over the sands in the

sultry night. Dreams are not a reflection of who we are but who our heart knows us to be. A

mirror that does not lie.

 

He saw himself mirrored in the falcon’s gaze as if seeing himself for the first time as if

reflected in a moon-lit oasis. Falcon and man look to the heights with the same kindred eyes. The

gaze of visionary and far-seer. He releases the falcon like an offering to the skies and to the gods

bearing his heart aloft. A contented sigh like a nomad from an oasis. “Go then. Seek the stars.”

he bade. Its shrill cry like a battle cry wings embracing the heights like lost friends reunited.

Hope like fledglings yet unborn in aeries cry out in reply. Once Pharaoh’s prize falcon now

free. He closes his eyes savouring the resonance of its cry. Like a heraldry rallying the heart

for battles to come.

 

Just as the falcon does not waver long tensing upon the precipice before it steps forth to the

void and to soar his counterpart did not hesitate on his behalf. As it soared from an aerial

perspective the falcon beheld almost comically the Pharoah’s face growing dimunitised as it rose

free, its captor reduced like the pyramids and royal statues to merely the size of chess pieces on a

board. Like the eyes of a god looking down on mortals. The Pharaoh’s up-lifted hands like those

of a beggar, empty. Archers’ arrows do not find their mark. They rise after it threatening to fell it

in mid-flight but then fall back as it soars higher to zenith.

 

Dream differed reached at last. The falcon  mirrored by the Nile, gliding as effortlessly

as  a corsair vessel over placid seas into the red sunset, wind beneath wings it is silhouetted

against the sun like an emblazonment against a shield of flame. Like a cowering prey in the

shadow of a hovering raptor the Pharaoh looks up eyes blinded by the sun. The falcon shrills,

reveling in its flight and element. It breaks from its circle and seeks the greater heights. His

liberator watches its silhouette fade like a castaway looking at a ship’s wake and diminishing sail

over the horizon as if dissolving into the very sun like a vision, then turns to their armed

approach.

 

Blood drawn by talons on the forearm betrays but does not lie. The falconer’s eyes dare the

blade. It is nothing for his heart has known freedom and what it is to truly fly. He stands as tall

before them as proud as the Pharaoh. A crown of gold no more makes a true lord of Egypt than a

cage truly unmakes the free. The final heresy. Blades are drawn. He hears the falcon’s distant cry

like the cry of the bereaved land itself and closes his eyes. One eve the guardsmen preventing

sacred offerings to a “traitor’s grave” to free a soul to the gods.

 

They saw only moonbeams falling as the falcon god visited  his lone sarcophagus like a

chrysalis and bade him shed the cage for the stars await the free. As you freed me friend. So

I free you and no cage comes between us again.

From the eternal flame of the desert stars, a falcon cries out to its own.

The ghost whispers its wings as they caress the sky sigh of the ageless.  Beckoning

dreams differed restively pushed to the back of the mind are like the plaintive voice at

during a long voyage asking, “are not we within sight?”

It is the voice of the heart’s craving like the cries from an aerie calling out to its listener

urging it to soar with a far-seeing gaze in its search and to not return empty-handed.





Greg Patrick - A dual citizen of Ireland and the states, Greg Patrick is an Irish/Armenian traveller poet and the son of a Navy enlisted man. He is also a former Humanitarian aid worker who worked with great horses for years and loves the wilds of Connemara and Galway in the rain where he's written many stories. Greg spent his youth in the South Pacific and Europe and currently resides in Galway, Ireland and sometimes the states.

  

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