Book Read Free

The Seventh Raven

Page 3

by David Elliott


  Anger is a force you dare not halt.

  Think of the hot-blooded stag that vaults

  from the brush: Stop it at your peril.

  Passion’s natural; nature’s feral.

  I miss my sons, their bawdy, roughneck ways.

  But time heals all, so everyone says,

  and my sorrow is offset by days

  with my daughter. She must never know

  what happened those many years ago.

  Why burden her with that history?

  If she knows, she might blame me.

  SHE works in the dairy

  The cows make obeisance

  The air smells of jasmine

  The milk tastes of honey

  She walks in the fields

  The earth shields her footsteps

  From all its sharp edges

  The snakes and the wasps

  Renounce their grim venoms

  She sits in the garden

  The stones shed their anger

  The bees sing like thrushes

  The worms stave their hunger

  The centipede sleeps

  But forces unseen

  Are shaping her future

  And no one can guess

  The secrets they keep

  APRIL

  In spite of my suspicions, my life here is good.

  Still, I do sometimes feel lonely.

  The day is filled with chores, hauling wood.

  But like so many other only

  children, I have found a way to keep

  my own company. Each night, before prayers and sleep,

  I play a clarsach harp that Father carved for me

  from the bole of an ancient hornbeam tree.

  My parents say I have unusual talent,

  that my music is beyond compare,

  but I know that parents everywhere

  say things to help their children feel content.

  Still, when I play the harp and sing,

  I feel as if my soul has sprouted wings.

  AND this is the harp

  With its bittersweet strings

  And its arms carved with wings

  That were meant to be angels

  But the wood of the hornbeam

  Knew the truth of Jack’s heart

  It would not surrender

  Its grain to his art

  It guided his chisel

  It flouted his will

  Leading his gouge

  Not stopping until

  The cherubs and seraphs

  That Jack had intended

  Morphed and amended

  Themselves into ravens

  Six on the frame

  Three on each side

  Each beak startled open

  Open to chide

  Their affrighted creator

  Who looked on in wonder

  His awe even greater

  When he saw what appeared

  On the harp’s gleaming sound box

  Which he had veneered

  With the wood of the birch

  A magnificent raven

  Aloft on its perch

  The carving so skillful

  That no human hand

  Was behind such perfection

  He’d thought to carve angels

  Life made a correction

  * * *

  Jack stared at the image

  With fear and dismay

  Truth is relentless

  Truth finds a way

  AND deep in the forest

  Six ravens are feeding

  Their bird hearts are beating

  Their talons are kneading

  The earth as they cry

  Once we were men

  With fists big as boulders

  And voices like thunder

  We set back our shoulders

  And carried our burdens

  Proud of our vigor

  Our hair thick as forests

  That grow on the mountain

  Our skin clear as August

  Our eyes fine and bright

  As the calendar’s stars

  Our father betrayed us

  We thought that he loved us

  Instead he has damned us

  To eternal shame

  Now we are scavengers

  Death’s angry stewards

  Dressed always in mourning

  Debased and dejected

  Without home or name

  * * *

  We’re not like our brother

  We can’t understand him

  He does not complain

  For all that we’ve lost

  Our manhood our futures

  Discarded and tossed

  On Time’s rotting midden

  But he does not sorrow

  Although our hearts break

  He was always a stranger

  Distant opaque

  ROBYN

  I hear my brothers’ bitter grief—their plans,

  their dreams, their young and lusty time all

  stolen from them, but without a thief to

  prosecute and hang for this alleged

  crime. The searing pain impossible to

  bear. The biting excavation of each

  bone. And now they find thick talons where there

  once stood brawny legs. They bemoan the

  shallow, rapid breath, and fear the naked,

  raw confusion to be one kind of thing

  then suddenly another. They find a

  feathered, dazed illusion where once their eyes

  beheld a loving brother. Forsaken

  and misfigured, they feel unfairly cursed.

  They cannot see the irony: Our fates

  have been reversed. How strange it is that they

  now feel so out of place and wrong, while I

  in soul and body know I finally

  belong. As for our reckless father, when

  it comes to me, how can I be

  resentful? His anger set me free.

  AND these are the hands

  Of Jack and Jane’s daughter

  The same hands that help

  Her mother and father

  The same hands that milk

  The red cow each morning

  The same hands that churn

  The cream into butter

  The same hands that carry

  The wood for the fire

  She touches the harp

  Her fingers are rivers

  Graceful and flowing

  Her thumb is a deer

  Alive in the clearing

  Her muscles are birdsong

  Supple and daring

  Drawing strange tunings

  Hypnotic and fairy

  The melodies soaring

  The resonance clear

  And the thatch finds its meaning

  And the young field is greening

  And the wild boar’s leaning

  Closer to hear

  APRIL

  Many days, as I go about my chores

  my idle mind wanders where it chooses.

  It carries me to foreign lands and far-off shores

  and helps to pass the time, diverts me and amuses

  when restlessness becomes an enemy.

  Often, strange impressions come to me,

  but one, especially, leaves a residue

  of shining truth, and yet it can’t be true.

  I am taken by the silly, childish notion

  that the harp and I share a common fate.

  What that might be I can’t anticipate,

  but it fills me with such deep and powerful emotion

  that each day I hold the harp more dear,

  and always want it next to me. I am uncalm when it’s not near.

  BUT the harp cannot mute

  The oracular voice

  That speaks to her nightly

  No rest and no choice

  APRIL

  Seven. Seven acorns on the ground.

  That is how the dream
begins.

  Seven. Like the deadly sins.

  I look at them, then turn around.

  But something makes me look again,

  and in their place stand seven men.

  Six of them look back at me,

  in their eyes, an earnest plea.

  But the seventh turns his back.

  He will not let me see his face;

  silent, steadfast in his place,

  he turns a pure and shining black

  and rises slowly in the air

  to leave me, weeping, standing there.

  JANE

  It’s true that nothing lasts forever.

  April’s not a fool. She’s too clever

  for the lie to survive much longer.

  Every night her dreams get stronger,

  destroying her peace, prolonging her

  doubts. I hear her cry out in her sleep

  and wonder how much longer I can keep

  up with this cruel hypocrisy.

  My husband, Jack, says, Wait and see—

  she’ll soon be fine. We don’t agree.

  I know the time has come to tell her,

  but I’m afraid it might compel her

  to behave foolishly or rash.

  She’s young, and the young are often brash.

  How quickly fire becomes ash

  when what is safe gainsays what is right.

  The night is day and the day is night.

  I love my daughter—but all’s askew.

  I no longer know what I should do.

  JACK

  Things are perfect just the way they are.

  No point in taking this too far—

  these fantastic, silly dreams, I mean.

  For girls this age, dreams are routine,

  which is why I am not at all keen

  on saying more than necessary.

  This whole business is temporary.

  It’s foolish to anticipate regret.

  Nothing bad has happened yet.

  But Jane’s a woman, and women fret.

  She says our daughter is acting strange.

  I have to admit there’s been a change

  in her optimistic temperament.

  I can see she’s worried, less content.

  But is that a reason to invent

  some fantasy about what she knows?

  Girls are moody; that’s how it goes.

  There’s too much drama, too many tears.

  Oh, how I wish my boys were here.

  WHAT once he cursed

  He wishes for

  He cannot change

  What came before

  There are no boys

  He has no sons

  What’s said is said

  What’s done is done

  * * *

  But each night

  In their rookery

  In a mountain

  Made of glass

  Six brawling ravens

  Roost together

  Foul of mood

  And foul of feather

  Ill-tempered bitter

  Sour glum

  They hate the woods

  That once they loved

  They hate what they’ve

  Become

  BUT a seventh

  Roosts alone

  In the mountain

  Made of glass

  His beak a shining

  Onyx moon

  His eyes two onyx stars

  He thinks about

  What’s come to pass

  A midnight avatar

  ROBYN

  Each evening when the setting sun retires,

  we find ourselves drawn here to sleep and rest.

  An inner voice cajoles and then conspires

  to bring us to this glazed, uncommon crest,

  a mountain made of glass, its brittle peak

  sequestered in the clouds. My brothers, in

  jarring voices shrill and loud, say it’s all

  part of the curse. They petition every

  day for the spell to be reversed, and hope

  a mighty wizard’s wand will wave and set

  them free. That’s not the case with me. I am

  altogether reconciled to

  existence in the wild. Yet I cannot

  help but ask why we spend our nights

  in this stifling place instead of sleeping in

  the wildwood, beneath the winking stars.

  This mountain is a crystal cell without

  guards or iron bars. We are unnaturally

  protected, transparently preserved.

  But for what I cannot guess. I am

  uneasy and unnerved.

  AND inside the cottage

  April is dreaming

  The axe it is steaming

  The thatch it is screaming

  The horned goat is foaming

  The saw has gone roaming

  No rest and no peace

  In a house built of lies

  April awakens

  She opens her eyes

  APRIL

  I was finishing my daily household chores,

  my parents with the cattle, as they are every morning.

  I had finished the tidying and was sweeping the floor

  when suddenly without reason, without any warning,

  seven acorns dropped from a corner of the ceiling.

  I was quickly overcome with the overwhelming feeling

  that something was concealed in the place from which they’d dropped.

  Seven acorns. It was as if time had stopped,

  as if the dream had bled into my life.

  I looked up to see the thatch had been disturbed,

  and then, my curiosity and my suspicion both uncurbed,

  I cut loose the thatch with my father’s hunting knife.

  Between the oaken joists, I found a wooden box.

  In it, neatly folded, lay seven young men’s smocks.

  AND the dough it breathes

  And the saw it swoons

  And the cup and the plate

  And the knife and the spoon

  Huddle together

  And sing to the moon

  Truth drops

  From the ceiling

  Sometimes too late

  But never too soon

  JANE

  Should I have thrown them away? Burned

  them? Or buried them? Should I have spurned

  forever my own sons? I could not.

  To know their smocks were near me brought

  back their memory, untied the knot

  of my grief, comforted my heartache,

  quenched a dreadful thirst I could not slake.

  Those seven shirts are all that remains.

  Destroying them erases, profanes,

  the truth that my blood runs in their veins.

  She came to me and I told it all—

  every detail that I could recall,

  the abhorrent and horrendous sight

  of seven ravens taking flight,

  how this cursed day was her birthright,

  how when at last the birds retreated,

  she sprang to life and death was cheated.

  I cannot say what will happen next:

  Truth has unforeseeable effects.

  JACK

  It’s finally arrived, the dreadful day.

  Let me alone. I’ve nothing to say.

  APRIL

  All of these years they have deceived me.

  All of these years lying.

  The ones who raised and conceived

  me insist that they were only trying

  to shield me. But shield me from what?

  I want to believe them, but

  I know too well they were protecting

  themselves, hiding from the link connecting

  my birth to my brothers’ vanishing that day.

  It wasn’t me, but truth they could not face.

  My brothers. Their sons. Gone with no trace.

  But
where there’s a will, there is always a way.

  I can’t say how or why, but I know it is my destiny

  to undo the raven spell and restore our broken family.

  AND the sun shuts its eyes

  And swallows the light

  And April arises

  In the blindness of night

  And the cottage walls crack

  And her small bag is packed

  And the harp says Take me

  And April is free

  Away from her mother

  Away from her father

  Away from everything

  Knowing her name

  Away from the chores

  The mop and the broom

  She steps into darkness

  Disappears in the gloom

  III

  JOURNEY

  AND the road is a villain

  And the road is a friend

  And the road is a story

  No beginning no end

  And the road is a question

  And the road is an answer

  And the road will transform you

  A sly necromancer

  And the road is a melody

  And the road is a howl

  And the road is a paradox

  A grin and a scowl

  And the road will not tell

  Where it’s been where it leads

  And the road is alive

  It sings and it bleeds

  * * *

  Who takes to the road

  Can never return

  For the road is a fire

  All pilgrims will burn

  APRIL

  Is it days? Or months? Or years? Or weeks

  that I have traveled this coarse and rugged thoroughfare?

  Crossing cloud-topped mountains, chancing swollen creeks,

  I’ve learned that time can be immeasurable as air.

  There are moments I forget what I’m searching for,

  and the only point is walking—walking, nothing more.

  I tell myself momentum is its own reward

  and that it’s unimportant what I’m moving toward.

  But I know it’s only weariness that’s speaking,

  idle thoughts to guard against the pitfall of despair

 

‹ Prev