Sunday, August 28, 2011

Day 100 - A New Beginning





During a springtime long ago, my friend Finneas and I, and the knight Cymru, and my stout and strong-hearted brother Kaial left on a journey that would take us across strange and dangerous lands, spanning valleys and hills I still long for.  The hard path tired our legs and backs, drove welts across our faces and furrows across our brows.  We never ceased being weary of our journey, yet we were emboldened by the many threats offered by the boundless land, creatures and forces as diverse in nature as can be imagined by anyone who has not ventured beyond the fields and woods of our homeland.  The feral demon, Dghom Ulfr, the various and terrible denizens of the Outland, the broad-winged and untamed birds of the Great Moors - all of these creatures are forever etched in my memory, a carved monument about which all future events in my life shall circle.  I left my home, innocent, and excited about the prospect of adventure.  I return, having lost some of my friends, having found many others; but I return home, forever changed, and a stranger to all who once knew me.

Friday, August 12, 2011

82 Cave of the Black Dog Part VI - Conclusion


* Wodan's Wilde Jagd (Hunt) by F.W. Heine (1882)


Conclusion

The wind cries softly in the field,
Zephyrs wafting among the long grass.
All who I have known encircle me,
Their lips form many words,
And the sounds imprint upon my ears,
But my friends are all strangers,
And have little to tell me.
This is a place I have journeyed
Many times before, and to which
I will return. Maybe then,
Maybe next time
The words will speak to me.

Drums in the distance,
Howls in the distance,
Fields laid flat by the wind,
Sun blocked by grey,
Sun blocked by blackness
Sun blocked by waters drip
From the high walls of my home

The horn of the Hunter blares in the void
The horn of the Hunter calls the hounds
The horn of the Hunter calls for judgment

“What is your song, Surface man?”
And in my voice I hear,
“The wide waters call to me,
Every current, every ripple,
The ocean’s azure cast,
The seas caressing song
Carving the fisherman’s tale,
Remembering harvests from recent times,
Remembering harvests from ancient times
Remembering the blood and bone of ancestors.”

But the Black Hunter slams down his axe,
Splinters the table before me,
Sound echoing among the hollow chasms
Flame cascading from the grim haft
And the fire crackles from broken wood
And ice crackles in the depths
And the Black Dog’s eyes flare

And the Black Hunter commands
To know the Truth that I carry.

The Hunter passes his hand over his axe,
And commands  again
To hear my song.
His companions fade into darkness
“What is your song?” he cries.
“What is the chant that names you?”

“It is the song of the Black Dog,
“It is the song long lost,
It is the forgotten promise
By which so much has been lost.

It is the beating drum,
The snap of branch,
The breaking wave.
It is broken hope.

It is the forgotten promise,
My soul undone,
The aching gnaw.
It is the place where I return,
Where I rest my fate.”

And the Hunter’s axe –
By right of the Hunt
Strikes deep within my bosom,
Shattering bone and flesh –
My life is lost,
And will soon be forgot.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

81 Cave of the Black Dog Part V



Part V

In the nave of the village church,
Metallic snap echoes as
The iron-laden doors shut.
Latches secure the Chapel’s etched glass,
Offerings at the altar,
Prayers at the altar
Chanting at the altar.
None will stop the Howl,
None will slake the thirst of Wind and Wave.

While in my granite cell
I look up, scenes of  Hell
Upon the roof,
When I look down,
An oaken chair,
Where my hands had been, I find black claws
Clutching at the curled arms.
Before me, a great Fire-stone, flames
Echoing from its center.
And across from me, a slender wisp
Rises from her own seat,
Encouraging the fire.
Chains curl behind me and to my side,
Spirits play in the smoke before me;
Feeding the Incineratus, Hideous
Shapes with mouths agape -
Many I have known.
Whose fault
Winds snapped the mast
Whose fault
Waves breaching the seawall
Whose fault
Red Eyes in Storm Clouds
Mea culpa
Mea culpa
Mea culpa

Shape envelops the wisp,
Substance to the dream,
Her flesh turns tight.
Her flesh turns grey,
Eyes of slate
Set upon a bony platter -
Shadow darkening across her figure.
The Black Dog sits beside her
Now a beast without eyes,
A slavering maw exhaling death.
Its sniff, a shivering hiss,
Its paws, pressing the air from my lungs,
Its teeth, like fire-shards, burrow into my flesh.
I think upon much that is lost,
And watch dimly as the blood
Pulses from my body.
I see her again,
And she has my mother’s face.

Black axes splinter the bold doors
Of the Village Church,
Hunters and dogs seeking
Victims who
Had sought victims themselves.
Promises to be kept
Promises to be kept
The Wild Hunt touches all.

I see her as she looked to me
When I was but a child
Then

Darkness is all.

80 (Not Billie's) Venice Beach



Thanks Billie for the inspiring Venice Beach Canals series.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

79 Cave of the Black Dog Part IV


Part IV
* A straunge and terrible wunder
 from the cover of a pamphlet published by Abraham Fleming in 1577


The Beast hungers today
Before the open Cave,
Its fiery eyes a beacon in the mist,
Overlooking the rime-smeared moors.
Astride their ebon ponies.
Shadow  hunters  aim bows of black ash
Toward the sea.
One huntsman sounds his curved horn,
Its sound awakes the Fae of this place
Its sound gives voice to the Vortices
To the Ley Lines that span the sawgrasses,
And a Tempest roars onto the coast
Its booty a sea-farer’s bane
And I am once again beset by dream.

The drums are heavy, like cold wet sand to my ears;
The skins wrap around my heart as they resound,
My chest compressed by the weight.

I do not know the shades here,
but they are my captors.
We walk in silence across a sconce-lit chamber ,
And approach a door.
Black it is, as ebon-laced night,
No moon, no star.
A chant not heard by men
Opens the door, and beyond
An emerald chamber reveals
A  single blackwood table, and two chairs.
A locked wooden chest, rimmed
By tarnished brass trim illumines the room.
Two rounded handles,
Shaped like serpent’s tails, each join a dragon’s
Head where the coils meet at the base.

I know this chest, and I turn away.
But then I hear the howl of the Black Dog
Whipping with the wind far above.
I understand -
“It is the first of many. Do what you must.”

Oh, but I remember this box.

A key is pressed into my hand,
And I think of Life’s many keys,
Drums, a howl and chant -

Not always found, not always used.
But my hand, a disembodied organ
Drums, a howl and chant -
Reaches for the padlock.
An eerie flash of light, and the lid
Glides open. Remove the cloth,
Drums, a howl and chant -
I must remove the cloth.  I lift
Drums, a howl and chant -
The linen, uncovering the chest’s content.
Within, the head of my father stares
His eyes, wide open, and his mouth seems to move
Drums, a howl and chant -
“Why have you done this to me?

Cracking timber and the frost whip of brine-edged wind
Assail me, and I suck up a hurting breath.
“Father, you betrayed me”, I shout.
“Yes, I have imprisoned
You within, for this is the nature of things”.
Drums, drums, drums.

Friday, August 5, 2011

78 Cave of the Black Dog Part III



Part III

And shelves of books – these too I remember.
But the book covers were torn, the pages
Filled with scrawl from another place.
The moon often glowed upon the shelves, as if to point
To the answers held there.
But the light burned, and I closed the shutters.
Knowledge, ever dangerous, and in any event,
Unattainable.

Where I lie today, I am aware of life,
Separate and strong, eyes closed
But watching me.

I am in his house now, I live
By his permission. Sometimes,
I forget how this came to pass –
How it is that I have come
From my house to this. And then,
The eyes open, ever slightly
And the cave turns crimson.

I know this place, it is the cave
Of the Black Dog. His breath
Spreads an icy mist, his eyes a cold flame.
He is watching me. Sometimes,
The silhouette of the four-footed
One appears briefly, his double-pawed
Legs padding across his den.

He knows my lament, better than I,
His cold mist, wet across my face
Pricks me into being, slices through the
Dim consciousness that binds me.

I remember a box, given to me as a child
And opened when I became a man.
A shattering light blinded me then,
But too late; my thoughts had been
Safely harbored in one place, now
Scattered, and the eerie dread
Fell upon me like broken timber,
What then, when left alone,
Could I do but count the burning stars,
And position them one by one
Meticulously across the sky.

I remember too, watching the shadows cross
My sleeping-chamber. Though I closed
My eyes, still I felt the movement,
The subtle shift as shades rippled
Across my resting place.

No one worried that the door was left wide open.
I saw it all, I see it still. In the pine grove
Beyond the threshold, her shrouded body cupped
For His grey fingers to wrap around her.
I cried out to her, as I cry out to her still,
Although she had nothing left to say.

Who has left open the door? I cried.
Who let  in the cool, light springtime air –
A terrible lie in the face of the wet earth
That will soon cover us all?

Couldn’t they see the ruby eyes in the marsh grass,
The probing paw, the fangs that gleamed in the moonlight?
I will not be able to shut that door again.

77 The Bard's Lament


I'm taking a day's break from continuing the "Cave of the Black Dog", and offer this piece, inspired by Susan Ersinghaus Measures of the Week: Sunday

Of course, you must imagine the playing of a lute at Keppler's Inn, a roomful of patrons drinking ale and tossing coppers about. Oh, and of course, the bard, and his lilting voice...


Once a man from the country I come from
A tale of a dragon he told;
Of a priest from the church in the town,
Who warned the village of a message he found;

O townsfolk, I've beheld the sign of the dragon,
Painted with pain and its wails,
My fate in god's hand has been written,
But it is for the church that I fear,
For our god no dragon of darkness reveres.

And late in the evening the wails came,
And late in the night came the flame,
The dragon had come and had taken,
The Church's chalice of jewels and gold.

And loud the laments of the high priest,
The church's great treasure he lost;
Fear not, for we love you our preacher,
And our god must be given his due.

A month passed, and then yet another,
And a gift did the townspeople make
Of a chalice of jewels and gold
To their priest and their church and their god.

And late in the evening the wails came,
And late in the night came the flame,
The dragon had come and had taken,
The Church's chalice of jewels and gold

And loud the laments of the high priest,
The church's great treasure he lost;
Fear not, for we love you our preacher,
and our god must be given his due.

A month passed, and then yet another,
And a gift did the townspeople make
Of a chalice of jewels and gold
To their priest and their church and their god.

Now did the man who told me this tale,
Keep watch over chalice and church
Each evening in the low pews he waited,
For the beast to make himself known.

And before sunrise early one morning,
The doors to the church they did open,
And the church priest did close them behind.
The teller of this tale did keep hidden,

To watch what began to unfold.  A chain
By a wall it was hidden, and the priest
With ardor and fervor he pulled.
And the altar did shake and did swivel,
And to the teller revealed,

A stairway below to a hallway,
An underground for most blessed of plans;
And next did the priest take the chalice
The chalice of jewels and gold.

And minutes did pass by like hours,
When the tale-teller did now behold,
The priest returning to the altar with fire,
and with fire the altar did burn.

No chalice of gold and of jewels,
Had this priest to the altar restored,
But twice he pulled on the great chain,
And to its place the altar returned.

And late in the evening the wails
And late in the night came the flame,
The priest had come and had taken,
The Church's chalice of jewels and gold.

And loud the laments of the dragon,
The church's treasure he lost;
Fear not, for we love you our preacher,
and our god must be given his due.