The Caiplie Caves

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by Karen Solie

among ourselves, salivating

  the honeydew inoculum and spitting

  when we talked, incubating the deformity

  that falls to the soil, becomes the soil, the pathogen

  our conditions were right for.

  Pittenweem, place of the cave, the cell.

  Pretty Pittenweem, its wynds to the harbour.

  It was as though, once we’d killed her there

  lights went up at last orders of a fucked-up session, and we read

  on neighbours’ faces our own expressions.

  Ugly, greedy, wasted.

  We’d had plans for Nicolas Lawson

  but called time.

  Something did not want the best for us, and hid itself

  in our confusion. Hidden, it lived

  in everything. That we were superstitious, easily led,

  afraid of the unfamiliar in familiar ways

  could all be true. Still

  to those who believe we knew no better

  I’d say, we knew.

  WHITE STRANGERS

  under the yardlight

  the yard an island

  walking out of the dark

  like wading ashore

  I answered

  when they knocked

  you have to in this cold

  and that Weiser lock

  a ten-year-old could force

  their truck died

  in the field they said

  phones too

  where they were hunting

  drinking

  and couldn’t leave the rifles

  as no doubt I would agree

  I am alone here

  why is that

  blizzard a sea

  breaking through the windbreak

  two men with guns

  what could I do

  I let them in

  ORIGIN STORY

  Pregnant by rape, deception,

  or in defiance, accounts vary,

  Thaney was thrown from the 25th-floor balcony

  of Traprain Law by her father, Loth,

  a pride-based thinker

  consumed by a tyrant’s bloody melancholy.

  Maybe she loved him.

  It doesn’t seem possible

  but that’s never stopped anybody.

  As happens in these stories, she survived,

  offending the Bass Rock gannets

  who thought they’d seen everything

  and Loth, who, in his executive hatred

  of surprises, set her adrift

  in a coracle without oars,

  said, Then let the firth’s dogs have her.

  *

  To make our own the righteous anger

  that keeps some people alive

  feels like doing something

  so grief and fear don’t stir

  under their blanket, don’t open their eyes.

  So survival does not seem merely accidental

  to the indecision when to lay down

  the earthly burdens, the way a quality is accidental

  to a substance —

  No, not like that,

  she may have thought,

  drifting toward the rock that would be named for her,

  clutching at its hair, the fish curious

  though emotionally disinterested, as fish are.

  They crowded these waters for centuries

  in case something like this ever happened again.

  Until recently. Not many fish now.

  *

  The extremities numb first,

  her body closing the wings of its mansion

  to warm a small inner apartment —

  a stove, a bulb on a cord.

  All night she clung to the hide

  of the greenstone, until the tide took her, at dawn

  when walls between worlds

  are thin as a motel’s.

  Don’t stir, don’t open your eyes, not yet.

  Thaney, astronaut

  of an inhospitable element

  like that between units of time

  which, overflowing, extinguishes time.

  Please can I lay them down.

  How long was she out there. An era, floating

  in a cortege of unhelpful sea life,

  in the imagination of a culture

  with a fetish for suffering,

  condensed to a bright concentrate

  like the picture on an old tube television,

  stove inside her, bulb on a cord.

  Were she extinguished, it would glow

  a little while, not long.

  *

  Accounts, though varied, say she cried,

  prayed, maybe she sang, no one knows

  but the double tides at Culross

  that brought her ashore. A quirk

  of local topography, not the miracle

  ascribed to her child, Kentigern,

  born on the north beach and discovered by —

  with their usual flair

  for being at the right place

  at the right time —

  shepherds, who fetched the monk

  Servanus, from whom Kentigern acquired

  the pet name Mungo — or, Dear One —

  and a leadership role in the militia of Christ.

  *

  Thaney, burning from her passage

  through the semblance

  acquired the density of something

  about to be lost.

  KENTIGERN AND THE ROBIN

  A fine day to be cruel. Sunny, with a breeze

  to carry their laughter’s smoke

  across the cloister.

  The rot budding at the core of their energies they’d diagnosed

  as Servanus’ fondness for Kentigern,

  who’d washed up on the beach at Culross

  like trash in the barrel of his mother

  to steal the affection entitled them.

  Hatred is a plotting emotion

  and gleefully inclusive. Also irksome

  the more they discussed it, Servanus’ love

  for his pet robin, a stupid thing so trusting

  it would eat from his hand.

  Killing it was a way to toss

  their disappointment off an overpass

  without dying. To give up, using another’s life.

  To blame the bastard killed three birds in one.

  A person can’t just do nothing.

  Into the broken little body Kentigern poured a scant ounce of his spirit.

  Into the vacuum left behind rolled a pebble from the afterworld.

  I thought as much, Servanus said

  and summoned the novitiates: See, this boy is above you.

  To him, the standard does not apply.

  Through this address, the robin sang.

  Through prayers, chores, classes, meals,

  through late mass and into the night

  it sang to young men with their heads in their hands,

  to the knowledge of what they’d done with their ability to do so.

  Unwound its voice like a rope into the place it had been

  where all communication is one-way.

  But a part of it wouldn’t be called back.

  The robin never flew again,

  bound as it was to Kentigern by its debt.

  TO THE EXTENT A TRADITION CAN BE SAID TO BE DEVELOPED; IT IS MORE ACCURATE TO SAY IT CAN BE CLOTHED IN DIFFERENT FORMS

  As three persons in one, I come to this life:

  the one in it, the one beside it, the one far away.

  As one also are my three enemies, and the effects

  of meds taken at mealtimes.

  A stable mind wants vigil, prayer, and labour.

  A three-legged table fits nicely in its corner

  like a soul in the cleanliness of a realm

  whose mathematics cannot lead to error.

  Spinoza so loved the triangle

  he wished to appreciate God that way.

  Pythagoras distru
sted nature. Its even numbers

  were to him, in their easy divisibility, female;

  though the four spiritual violences, four heavens, four hells

  are, like a six-figure salary,

  more than seems, strictly speaking, necessary.

  The three ways the devil is among us, you should know them.

  And the three waters to which we may be lost

  that flow from injury, exhaustion, sorrow.

  Five rows of folding chairs were the first thing police saw

  in the starved toddler’s home, and in the home

  the seven symbols, and the five kinds of harm.

  In the highest place, without society, of no definite colour, beak in the air

  sweetly singing lives the solitary bird.

  The three laws of inner recollection —

  do not be lukewarm in this work.

  Rubbing at your imperfections as at old stains.

  The fifteen strengths are outnumbered by what must be learned,

  even more so by what must be avoided, a list too long to get into here

  but one Socrates may have pondered as for twenty-four hours

  he stood motionless in the snow, no harm done

  to body or mind,

  composed, altered, erotic, detached —

  a story told also about St. Columba

  who, nicknamed St. Colm by the lowland Scots

  was known to the English as St. Qualm, meaning

  torment, violent death, destruction, plague.

  Cassian’s six ranks of angels conform to Columba’s,

  which Pope Gregory, the Great Administrator, improved upon, adding three.

  In Bill Wilson’s Big Book, twelve steps conquer addiction.

  There are twelve rungs on the Desert Fathers’ ladder to perfection.

  All you have to do to climb the last one is to die.

  AN UNEXPECTED ENCOUNTER WITH HE WHO HAS BEEN LEFT ALONE TO HIS PERILS

  Coming across a thing like this it isn’t right

  A pile of cast-offs off-cuts mistints

  roll-ends I’m not sure

  to whom but he is an insult No

  I know you didn’t say anything

  and anyway it’s no crime to resemble discarded inventory

  not a crime to regard others

  with what appears to be only basic species recognition

  his narrowed eyes and laid-back ears

  the unnerving impression he stares at a situation behind us

  becoming more and more likely

  You’re not one to judge No

  Nor am I of course but clearly

  he does not have both oars in the water does not try

  to spare the soft parts of his footsoles

  like the rest of us When he was a child

  did a moth fly into his ear did he rest too long on a stone

  and catch a cold in his head It’s unnatural

  or overly natural What can one do with someone

  from whom nothing can be taken

  He’s done it to himself hasn’t he

  A RETREAT

  My friend A. owns a model of wireless optimism.

  Has to recharge sometimes, but otherwise it’s always with her.

  I’d concluded I don’t know how to love without hating.

  A. said I needed a break from meaning’s narrative, summary aspects,

  should spend time with the natural phenomena no speculation can penetrate.

  She said to surrender an idea will feel like a new idea.

  I took a sleeping bag to a sheltered place, and set out my paraphernalia.

  After dark, the sea a television in another room, only the audio reached me.

  A sound like traffic. Or wind and rain.

  Vague, like the fog in my clothes.

  In fact, details of the world at large seemed radically redacted

  and a person forced to extrapolate from context.

  It’s said we must learn to live with our shame, but some people can escape it.

  They leave it with someone else, to whom it then belongs.

  When I woke, my throat was raw, as if I’d shouted all night, or sung.

  Which I might have done, I don’t remember, I was so high.

  SONG

  The cliff face, open and soft // vulnerable, so near the Coastal Path // undermined

  by the sea and the noise of the sea // backs away slowly, meets no eye //

  Waters of the firth like dogs at a fence // and, behind them, May Island //

  keeping to itself the authoritative word // scans the shore without turning its head //

  III

  SONG

  In the blood month, the dormancies // in its feelings for us, the land cools //

  and conversation runs toward the fee // Who once was a friend, we must guard against //

  Thing creates thing beyond our compass // They confide in each other, but not in me //

  Between silence and language omens proliferate // A queue of seeds in the ground //

  A LESSON

  The tide rises, a crowd returning from a stadium,

  abstract sound of innumerable specifics

  reentering the shoreline’s boroughs. Wheels clatter

  on the rocks of your driveway, headlamps light the wall.

  A door opens in the place in you joy leaps to.

  There’s puttering in the kitchen. Close your eyes.

  What might happen this cycle has happened, and a promise kept —

  the nightmare rocks and fingery weed-beds banished —

  though something more important kicking off elsewhere

  already has the water’s attention. Yet again it prepares to withdraw

  even its neglect. Tidal pools are exposed,

  their smell of mortal exchanges.

  Nothing exists in darkness that doesn’t in the light.

  Once, this comforted you.

  THE INTERCESSORS

  At our disposal are the tools, the DIY project kit.

  The project is ourselves. He doesn’t talk lack, doesn’t

  think lack, He thinks like a millionaire, why shouldn’t we?

  It’s our spiritual heritage to secure our prosperity.

  The Air1 Team meets daily to forward requests

  to the Mighty Warriors Intercessors

  Army. Terry from Paisley, who needs help with rent,

  whose back pain arouses the neighbours’ judgment,

  may well be annoyed appeals for prayers

  that Tiger the cat be completely cured including cancer

  get more traction in the virtual community.

  The intensity of my dream made me unclean until evening.

  Walking unsteadily on the ice at night outside the beer parlour

  we might, like Bothelm of Hexham, fracture an arm;

  but whereas by a splinter of Oswald’s cross

  was he made whole, we may wake more broken, more wrong,

  to another in a series of excuses: My office prevents me

  from being with you at this time. Whenever I take an Aleve,

  Terry, I’ll think of you. Anonymous thanks us for efforts

  compelling her husband — who, though a literary scholar,

  is careless with the grammar of eternal salvation —

  to sever his link with the other woman,

  casting that particular mountain into the sea, etc.

  and vouches for the Prayer and Fasting CD, the free relic

  with online purchase. One sends a barbarian

  to fight a barbarian, in the Roman wisdom.

  Spurned by Honorius in a letter suggesting they defend

  themselves, in misery the British turned on each other, retreated

  to the old hill forts. Trouble, distress, and sorrow ride before

  a miracle. After a miracle, well, you know.

  There’s limited fortune in the world, it seems,

  or a distribution problem. But I go to sleep trusti
ng

  my damaged face will be restored as a sign

  of love. And extend also my intercessions for Helen,

  alone since her Westie, old and full of days, “companion

  of companions, friend of friends,” went the way of his fathers.

  CRAIL SPRING

  Surprised on returning to find the flat

  flooded with light. Merciless,

  evaporative, even when overcast, and

  as the solstice neared, sanctimonious

  in its imperative to productivity.

  An expert with his pen light wondering

  how you let it get this bad. That tone.

  We were out all day in the clarity

  of errors multiplied

  into reality. Excess weight disclosed

  by the indignity of seasonal clothes

  and suspicious the promise

  of those first fine days wouldn’t be

  borne out. Children wept with exhaustion

  in the playground past 11,

  birds prodded awake at 3. So when the haar

  sailed in, flags flying, party in a bag,

  and took over the streets, we rejoiced

  to see our choices diminish along

  with the outlines of what they’d wrought.

  Otherwise, not a fucking thing.

  What could we do but make a weekend of it?

  THE SHARING ECONOMY

  This performance of “I Want My Fucking Money”

  broadcast live from the street will conclude

  when the last human being on earth

  has perished.

  The Freshly Renovated Bachelor Suite

  has its ear to the ground, has the ear of the Paying Guest

  who’s found a bed among the household’s automatic functions,

  in its grotto of learning experiences (those decor objects from HomeSense’s

  Blunt Force Trauma Collection), above which the Victorian Charmer charms

  in its super-convenient location, and

  the Superhosts walk overland.

  A pilot light flickers like an awareness of self.

  Chaos whispers through the fittings, patterns in the textiles

  repeat, pipes sing, the weeping tile: between sound and silence

  is music. In fact, the Paying Guest rises in the middle of the night

  to turn off the radio where no radio exists, a storm imminent over the sea,

  no, the lake — where we are will come clear in a minute —

  and when the furnace knocks twice

 

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