Sep '02 [Home] By Degree 365: Year One of 9/11 Special Selections:Point of Entry Gail Segal
A Headwaters Press/ Big City Lit Print Series Release |
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Vade Mecum* Day One Who can say what with words shredded, gnawed at the edges a friction of use eating away at them? The whole house, termite-infested, and the beams supporting the structure have been chewed to the ground. Day Two It will be the first time when through the window of night I see bats flitting a blackness over the red tiles and the stone floor a coldness and the air from the Adige a coolness and the bats a manic chemistry of fireworks without fire, without sparkle or light or ash light dripping or ash. . . . Day Seven One story will raise the soul from its dead body. So what? Think of the scars. Think of the scars stretching and the incense choking and the processional of black robes and stale bread and the parishioners huffing Shh-shh when the small boys in the back row begin a skirmish over the yellow truck wheeling itself up every scarred surface. . . . Day Eleven In the dream she rides the bull, horned, bucking, next to a high hedge and with great thrill, mastery, across a vast lawn of the Middle Ages until, still gripped by her thighs, the bull shrinks into dung beetle, a scarab that turns into carnelian and slips from her open hand into the long-leafed grass. Day Twelve So this is the day that Saturn drags himself from Taurus, crouched, limp-legged backlit by stars that shape a bull. And traveling what will you take with you? Vade mecum. Or put another way, what will you reach for first when from your delicious dream the smell of smoke arouses? What will you stuff into your pockets when through the floorboards the flames arch and rise? (Paleolithic drawing, caves at Lascaux, France.) [*] Vade mecum: anything carried for constant use, a guidebook, manual, bag; literally, 'Go with me.' (Gail Segal studied with Ellen Bryant Voigt, Tom Lux, and Michael Ryan as a student in the Warren Wilson MFA Program, which she completed in 1989. Her poems have appeared in Chelsea, Gulf Coast, The Virginia Quarterly Review, and New Orleans Review, and her translations of Italian poet Alfred dePalchi, Addictive Aversions, were published in book form in 1999 (Zenon Press). Her first manuscript, In Gravity's Pull, is forthcoming from Shank Painter Press this year. Segal teaches in the Graduate Film Program at NYU, Tisch School of the Arts.) |