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The Seeker Ascends

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by Merle Nudelman




  THE SEEKER ASCENDS

  THE SEEKER ASCENDS

  poems by

  Merle Nudelman

  INANNA Publications and Education Inc.

  Toronto, Canada

  Copyright © 2018 Merle Nudelman

  Except for the use of short passages for review purposes, no part of this book may be reproduced, in part or in whole, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronically or mechanically, including photocopying, recording, or any information or storage retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.

  The publisher gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council for its publishing program. The publisher is also grateful for the financial assistance received from the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund.

  Cover artwork: Mary Lou Payzant, Fear of Falling #4, 2014, Acrylic on canvas, 18 x 14 inches. Photo: John Oughton.

  Cover design: Val Fullard

  eBook: tikaebooks.com

  Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

  Nudelman, Merle, author

  The seeker ascends / Merle Nudelman.

  (Inanna poetry & fiction series)

  Poems.

  Issued in print and electronic formats.

  ISBN 978-1-77133-521-8 (softcover).— ISBN 978-1-77133-522-5 (epub).—

  ISBN 978-1-77133-523-2 (Kindle).— ISBN 978-1-77133-524-9 (pdf)

  I. Title. II. Series: Inanna poetry and fiction series

  PS8577.U34S44 2018 C811’.6 C2018-901539-X

  C2018-901540-3

  Printed and bound in Canada

  Inanna Publications and Education Inc.

  210 Founders College, York University

  4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3 Canada

  Telephone: (416) 736–5356 Fax (416) 736–5765

  Email: inanna.publications@inanna.ca Website: www.inanna.ca

  For Michael,

  in eternal loving memory

  Contents

  THIS ROOFLESS HOUSE

  The Verge

  Loss

  Ode to a Birch

  The Endless Once

  After that, the Garden

  Autumnal

  ART IN TRUTH

  Picasso at 90

  The Telling Stream

  Sensation and the Sublime

  Woman in the Negative

  The Innocence of Change

  Enfeeblement Conspires

  Within the Behemoth a Dulcet Turning

  The Enigma of Shells

  WHAT LINGERS

  Terrors

  Old Business

  Tea Party Twist

  Waiting to Search Holocaust Records of my Parents’ Enslavement

  Coronary Red

  The spherical motion of the May rake

  Mechanics of Metamorphosis

  The Start of Yellow

  THE CIRCULAR LINEAR

  Life Dream

  Verisimilitude

  Stepping Away from Then

  The Seeker Ascends

  Elevation

  Land/scapes

  Notes

  Acknowledgements

  That time was like never, and like always.

  So we go there, where nothing is waiting;

  we find everything waiting there.

  —Pablo Neruda

  This Roofless House

  The Verge

  Skipping to school she ponders the puzzle —

  triangular fruit falling at her feet,

  petals onto lids, lips, and into her ears

  fragrant whispers about essence:

  the integer’s power, fulcrum’s scale.

  Chanting its name thrice then thrice and thrice,

  she’s diamond-blue, webbed in air thick with 3s.

  Saffron molecules whirl dervish-like,

  implant membranes. Blood’s mirror radiates

  mesmerized atoms out into the ether —

  triple-braided strands encircling.

  Her life’s cipher doubled to infinity.

  Beyond contradiction, lies, and illusion loops the authentic.

  For now, a bewildered heaven.

  In the third month she was born, he in the ninth; they met

  on the ninth of the twelfth. Wed in the sixth, she bore

  two sons: she-note for the male trio.

  Mystics foretell three brings wisdom as we climb

  the sides of life’s triangle — to the tip, to oneness.

  The cosmic numeral challenges:

  create with what you hold and rejoice in the cryptic.

  So it is told. So it is believed. Behold its form:

  the female figure bearing life, a labyrinth,

  eyes intuiting connection.

  Thrice, ten years wash over the land. Sun moves, sky rains,

  stars burn in the firmament. The moon reflects upon

  strings of prayer beads in sets of thirty-three ––

  Amen’s numeric peer.

  Devotion to the power of three three three.

  Still, at thirty-three her son dies.

  Loss

  i.

  When the one she prizes

  more than breath,

  more than her sacred self,

  when this prismatic being

  plunges perilously ill,

  crumbles on cancerous boulders below,

  the world greys

 

  and she a stranger in it —

  an entity that appears woman

  but is merely afterimage.

  Quaking in the void

  where he once stood

  her bones weep

  for all he was

  and was to be

  her heart (a monstrous, distorted thing)

  bursts to break, to end

  the shuddering into another day.

  ii.

  There is mercy.

  In dreamy visions he comes.

  Robust and wise

  he comforts his mother,

  offers her courage

  and she clings

  to the golden haze.

  iii.

  Stage IV, they say, and the woman

  vows to save him.

  She scours the aisles,

  dismisses plums, guava, dragonfruit,

  cups a mangosteen

  pulsing in her palm.

  This potent fruit

  she brings to him

  with rich berries, purple grapes.

  Awake, asleep she seeks

  solutions, combinations —

  minerals, meridians, prayer —

  an elixir to right

  the riddle of mutated cells.

  Down her throat slithers the python.

  More metal than flesh, more do than feel

  the woman is fearless,

  indestructible.

  Son, heal her son.

  This is the thing and everything.

  She kills the python.

  iv.

  Armed with Olympic dedication

  he accepts all challenges

  braves the gamut —

  torturous treatments, tried and trial.

  Ever the athlete, he calibrates,

  charges into the fray —

  v.

  Believing


  in the healing peaks

  they are pink balloons

  on a roller coaster’s rise

  dark dominoes

  tossed and toppled

  when tumors progress.

  vi.

  What now?

  The oncologist shrugs.

  There are no comparables.

  Such steel.

  His trajectory flies

  off the charts.

  Trust and fear

  shuffle.

  vii.

  He did not trip or tumble.

  He did not slip then slide.

  He did not stand at the edge of that vast cliff

  recklessly bent.

  In truth, he wanted to dance,

  his children firm in his arms.

  To skate until the ice melted.

  To celebrate daybreak

  and its morning.

  viii.

  Pasty sky licks the seam

  sealing the beams

  dense as lead

  mashing him into, onto

  this mucky earth.

  Sweat from the bones

  of that faceless sky

  clings to thick

  phone wire,

  skews the spikes

  raining upon him

  flailing

  in the storm.

  Out of fog’s density

  a cry —

  Here, only here

  the seam relents.

  But the mist mutes,

  refutes,

  and he is lost.

  ix.

  His bedroom door dangles

  from its frame

  leaving space

  malleable

  while the lidless box stares

  at things

  best left unnamed —

  this roofless house

  its mad valve

  speckling arms red

  mother on her knees

  rotating the bloated

  his rusted possibilities

  doing the math wrong

  as her mind bleeds through the doorway

  crouches inside the quivery box

  screams at December’s claws

  unhinging a son’s heart.

  Ode to a Birch

  In height

  and breadth

  you dwarf us —

  column of textured bark

  branches steadying sky

  jade leaves

  chameleons

  on your helmet

  gleaming galactic

  You our sentinel

  firm at the gate

  a slender birch

  canopy full

  as geisha’s hair

  you shade us

  from sorrow

  refresh us

  with the laughter

  of your reach

  even

  in February’s

  noxious white

  unflinching

  you bear

  the trickling ice

  insidious snow

  burrowing

  beneath

  raw bark

  while the earth

  dims, furrows

  and you

  remain true

  day after

  punishing day

  remain our birch

  profound

  in your silence

  determined

  to bud again

  in summer

  fullness

  before fall’s

  stumbling

  foliage and twigs

  gather

  air’s fury

  But lightning stabs

  your hollow

  that takes the cut

  slowly

  straightens

  braces for storms’

  intent

  to do

  and they do

  strike again

  open fissures

  blight leaves

  distort

  your brilliant crown

  emptied

  of scattering squirrels

  the romp and swish

  Bird-gossip abounds

  surrounds you

  shift

  shifting

  within the grey

  in black December

  till the night of days

  when your herculean will

  is ambushed

  and tested

  no more.

  The Endless Once

  In then out again

  through prayer’s spaces,

  see how the lamp spins the maze —

  the pupil, the eye,

  heads touching,

  palms on small crowns.

  Blessings for them, tremulous scrolls,

  for hallowed lights remembered.

  Parents sing the words in their hands –

  grant me understanding so that I may live.

  They watch mother filming, squeeze

  close to father sitting on the bed.

  Fans wand him as he holds a prayer book:

  his children for a blessing.

  Moonlit comet

  he traces time,

  petalled arms shouldering.

  He sent signs and wonders into your midst

  near the locked box, morphine inside,

  near the oxygen where days lay

  fine on night’s surfaces.

  The lamp warms and they slip

  inside this moment

  paled rose on the infinite table

  and their waves are stilled.

  After that, the Garden

  Weeks you stoop in a cape that hangs

  in rigid roughness galling eyes.

  At your sides empty shells,

  prospects tangled at your feet.

  Palms pressing we face the wall

  that parts to our intent, reveals

  bursts of zinnias beside willows.

  We pause at the bench.

  The cape drops as he approaches —

  our daylight.

  Rising we reach for his hands,

  fold into him

  and he dispels

  your strand of tears.

  Autumnal

  They sit by the shore meditating on Chödron —

  the breath of joy, breath of anguish,

  tendrils between them.

  Floating inward they rise

  ruddy in clotted air.

  Mallard’s dance tenders

  maples flushed gold,

  the heft of this quiet

  on their shoulders.

  Pristine hush.

  Glacial lake pine primal stone —

  the tableau of it all

  woven into oneness —

  you, me

  this sunset, distant land

  there yet here

  as well.

  Art in Truth

  Picasso at 90

  Now he burns blue, spits at the scythe and hood,

  paints cruel age, the impotence —

  phallic pipes, the artist’s severed hand,

  fecund woman scorning the besotted old man.

  Stained grey & splayed his fingers grip the brush,

  jab at the muted palette — fanned lines

  swift and uncluttered, duplicity

  discarded as his final years wrestle

  across the voids. Simplicity

  strips statements to black and white —

  the female other sprawled
, her open sex

  staring. She//he. Icon draws his fright,

  brush-strokes the model. Life pared

  to the passion of art. Body/bar/chair.

  The Telling Stream

  for Richard B. Wright

  He binds them without knot, twine or even splice,

  binds the agreeable words one to the other and others

  like the elements of water they cleave in storied delight

  while each continues to expound:

  sprung leaves on a rushing stream, unbound.

  Sensation and the Sublime

  L’Orangerie, Paris

  Here, the oval nave —

  chaste walls,

  crystal-domed moons.

  Rooted in alabaster

  she’s a sail seeking.

  Silence reverberates.

  Light-misted canvasses

  exhale, fill the room’s orb.

  In each: the pond, a stipple —

  lilies served by willows,

  day’s tilt and hue.

  Novice,

  she enters the garden,

  breeze’s spectrum,

  listens for reflections.

  Woman in the Negative

  Framed by the window,

  luminous as a Degas

  the dancer plaits

  ill-starred light,

  invokes Fortuna

  fable-shaped.

  What about her face:

  painted by dusk,

  spaces lingering

  between ecru lines?

  Vaporous canvas —

  jeté in pastels.

  The Innocence of Change

  for Blue Vase and Flowers by Judith Davidson-Palmer

  Chrysanthemums yawn

  languidly in cool light —

  stalks taut yet

  swan-neck supple,

  leaves mudra-cupped to catch

  sheer August sun

  trickling past prim purples,

  brassy, sassy rose,

  down long-legged stems

  stuffed

  into the generous mouth

  blue and unpuckered.

  Blooms bleat

  in the late noon

  about their floral life,

  trust in glazed clay

  to nourish, close the cut

  where roots once were,

  to hold the huddling

  safe to September.

  Backs sag,

  mums droop

  and some heads

  drop to the table

 

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