Captivity

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by Laurie Sheck


  [ ] to sing [ ]

  [ ] a storm wind [ ]

  [ ] and no pain [ ]

  What survives is mutilated, torn—on scraps of papyrus

     Used to mummify crocodiles, on pottery shards.

  It’s the brackets that I’ve grown to love; how they don’t banish the lostness

     But give voice and space to absence, blanks.

  As now, the curtains pulsing over the open window

     Make of it a lost, unsettled place

  Between the solid fields of wall.

  …

  When I felt my mind tear, words flared in it like electric light, like currents buzzing.

     It had brackets in it surrounding things I couldn’t see

  And the brackets were locked gates

     At each end of a field I couldn’t enter. Some days there were many such fields,

  On other days just few. The brackets were rigid, of a silvery quality,

     Surrounded by a redblack air.

  A bracket will not allow dissection.

  I peered through them to the space I couldn’t enter. Quiet field without possession.

     No scar-trace or word-trace I could see.

  …

  If I closed my book in the lamplight (the others sleeping, the rough sound of their breathing)

     Would I find the poem of my nightblack field,

  And would it look like this?—

  [ ]

  the wayfarer

  silent hidden

  [indecipherable]

  unreachable

  [ ]

  what loves.

  …

  In the newspaper the diagram of the human genome

     Looked true the way photos of the moon look true, the way drawings of neurons,

  All flaying, reaching tentacles and readiness seem true. So much busyness

     And struggle, then nothing for a while, then the intense

  Attentiveness, elemental, a body needs to become for a time unvanishing,

     Repeating itself through the world.

  This is what’s inside of us, I thought. How strange, this landscape of inside.

  Still, such lost places in my mind when I think of it—

  [indecipherable]

  unreachable

  [ ]

  [ ] what

  loves.

  The Fifth Remove

  Sometimes a bare peace, a restoration.

     Too much veil in me, she thinks, if otherness is to sift further in,

  And must sift further in. Reason is a fragile wing.

     But I must cross and cross over even so. Far into otherwise and fractured,

  The irreconcilable estrangement of me breaking.

     Why must the mind cover itself why hide itself why bind itself in quiet and in dark—

  What is this chain

  And became very cold, coiled back,

     The articulations vanishing. Inside me a bold stretch of blue scattering away,

  Then burnt white.

     What is this chain of feelings by which we mean (if it is that) a self?

  A thing of more or less opacity, depending. Still, I’ve seen a red that does not mean,

     I’ve seen blue shadow, and structures most definite in their carvings

  As if no further correctness could be wished them.

     For every cliff and limb and edge

  Skeined in the afternoon and threatening

     There is a rinsing tenderness, and I am held here, and so met and accidented

  By perhaps.

  Unlike the winged recoil

  Many thanks for your letter.

     The other day we were given vaccinations, but one of us already stood apart,

  His entire face and arms marked by the smallpox, and on his neck a star-clump like singed

     Nerves, or spidery white kisses. Seeing him, I felt something strike at me, inside me, impale its

  Chisel there, unlike the winged recoil of the violet’s leaves.

     And then the earthline wavered, a grimace briefly shadowsharp and fractured.

  Bitter north wind, hail and sleet. I grow flexible and mingled.

     Shock brings with it a silent conviction of wonder.

  Comfort binds itself

  Thinking is a truceless act.

     How it holds the injured yets and thens inside it, so many layers of barter

  And resist. You who are all swerve,

     Distance and blindfold when I try to find you—

  Why did you plant in us, within our very cells,

     Such stinging cuts and tense pleasures born of wars; each chaotic

  Torn-away and knotted freedom?

     Comfort binds itself restless and apart:

  The yes disfigured, then the power of its tracing flame.

  A crisp whiteness

  For I have missed the feeling of being able to go somewhere else,

     Delicately barred as I am

  In this slow conversion of myself into nothingness—

     It’s as if all that visits the mind

  Is a great fire on an altar but I stand before it and am cold. I watch rich folds

  Of sky and feel how my eyes fail, trying to adjust, take hold—there are after-images, astigmatism,

     Irradiation, such movements of accommodation and convergence

  As I can barely comprehend, yet they are mine. Through this glare of self-distrust and longing

     I sense in the distance a crisp whiteness

  But it’s roughed overall with my wrong articulations, apprehensions,

     And so is darked.

  The Sixth Remove

  Fog gowning the hill, then slashed to burning.

     Into this far and barely-marked inside my mind I seek you, protector,

  But you are quiet, undisclosed. I feel the kind topography of wind, its shapes

     Cool and inhuman. Want them ever closer.

  Have you broken apart in your far-from-here, your always-absence, have you

     Shattered to burnt galaxies of atoms? How does one call to that which is not?—Yet even so—

  Rope-burn

  Maybe there is in silence a remoter tenderness,

     Uncharted peace most delicate and threatened. But I feel the rope-burn’s dizzying mystery on me

  Always, the long scald of it pressing on the captive’s wrists. Such parched riverbeds

     It carves there, such raw breakage of suppose and comfort.

  How can the mind caught up in fright not harm itself, not dream the killing-parties

     Ever? Not be lost in this thick wilderness of branchings

  Where it feels the brutal never,

  Stinging bond.

  Did not foresee

  The mind is a thing deeply marked. I have bound myself to this damage.

     Most delicate and difficult

  Strangeness, I have abandoned the idea of being

     Warm. There’s a strictness in the ice charged with its distinct breakages,

  Hard and beautifully detached—water once so blue polished to a sheen until it’s heightened

     And unlike itself.

  Outside, cold hills. The sky steel-colored, then duller in parts, the gray of smudged newsprint.

     I did not foresee

  How this becoming is a reckless and incautious thing. The ice

     Grows intricate where the stresses fall.

  No summer as yet

  And no summer as yet, but it will come with its bright pieces of whatever,

     Sorted by the eye yet still uncaptured,

  Greenly branched and various with promise. I’d like to watch it long enough,

     Held fast by the laws of its sequencing
s and shapings, and be so carried, the way the mind goes in

  Search of an after that will temper what has come before,

  Or sometimes not—: Did I tell you of the man I visited last week, who hasn’t lost the ability

     To move his tongue, his lips, to laugh or cry or sing or use his voice, yet is unable

  To utter any words, just a few unintelligible syllables,

     And recognizing this, stares into the fact of it

  As at the eggs in an opened anthill? I don’t know how to think of him. We are so rawly made,

     So carried into the harsh and almost-dark.

  As if stung in the throat. As if seared by a narrow wire-like blaze

     Sharply upon the air and always.

  Or resolve into a calm

  For there is so much crumbling and instead. I think of you now writing that last

     Note. How the aparts multiply, grow wild with clash and scatter. Or resolve into a calm

  I can barely understand—a wasp’s nest, maybe, the papery regularity of its cells,

     All those steady carefuls lining up. Your thin, your brittle wrist, gave back

  Its weight, its mass, its shadow—but to what? And now, in me, the far of your death

     Sternly whitens the notion of to see. You, now, not singular, but interspersed

  Among the questions,

  Elsewheres of water rushing down stone steps.

  The Seventh Remove

  But how each thought hacks and scalds itself

     As if there were no settlement to return to anymore,

  Jealous of the sweeping rain and in night-season cold under it.

     I went on foot and careless. She, who once was traded for a gun. She, led away into Removes.

  The cut thread of her, the and with bitterness I carried…And then nothing but wilderness,

     And being taken by, and a sorrow that cannot.

  No purchase

  I’ve come far North.

     The ice insists like a vast inexplicable tenderness of being, or an inquiry

  For which there is no answer. This white far has no purchase but itself,

     Ignites itself plainly. Doesn’t think what boundaries of or lacking food or shelter.

  Doesn’t think, What claim, what passage through, what profit, what contract, what frenzy of dissection.

     The brutal unsolved is a stark liberty.

  Matter has no ideal to pursue. I drift out from the sole inlet of to know.

  As when an otherwise opens

  Now December strikes in with its own brittleness, as when an otherwise

     Opens in the body, wrenching further into slant and hazard.

  Past the covert operations of the state, past checkpoints and official access,

     A crystal splits along the lines of its own cleavage.

  Questions unshelter themselves harshly. Each war-zone of them flaring, and radical with damage.

  The Eighth Remove

  But suppose is very fragile and away.

     Now, among the oaks and walnut trees, threat builds in me a tenser, riven place.

  I feel it press against my ribs, the steeps in it and thievery; what’s gentle crumbles

     Into guardedness and shards. Our provisions now are groundnuts, acorns, purslane, weeds.

  Hunger’s made of me a spy of comfort. For I have passed very quickly from to own.

  Maelstroms

  Trees bending, shockwaves of mind. Tender maelstroms

     Of astray and sunder. And shudderings of late summer light on the hill

  As when hurt pathways of thought

     Become habitable scars, strange comfort of roughness, hectic-calm.

  No captions beneath them, no marketing director saying, “Our job is to make people

     Buy things they don’t need or want.”

  How secretive the brain is. So many banishments inside it, so much sting.

     I watch the leaf-darks sway among the lit ones,

  Cureless in their turnings, flicks of wind.

  The cells in their distant otherness

  But there are so many thresholds in the body.

     The cells in their distant otherness inside me. As if I stood beside them blinded,

  Their script unbrailled, an iron away in them, a veiling,

     As when computer files won’t open though they’re called up by their codes,

  A glitch in the system keeping them separate and unknown.

     There is no clarifying edge.

  Watchfulness is a weak captive of itself.

  Mysteriously standing

  All the fiercer and lawlessly irregular

     These intervals of withdrawal where I am a burned field

  And above me the sky is thickening and clouding.

     In that field, little Stonehenge of the heart

  Mysteriously standing, its distinct construction odd and uninjured in this yellow

     Light. If I say I was flexible, was harmed, was cleansed, was helped, was deeply marked,

  I still can’t understand what I have been. Doubt falls in me falls through me

     A rough and intricate hazard. The mind carries an austere

  Inwardness that will not put out its eyes.

  The Ninth Remove

  Every day in another language.

     As when we passed the hill where one of their villages once prospered.

  Not of tents, but of wooden houses arranged in a manner of streets much like our own.

     Many had perished there of smallpox.

  An apart pierces and yet at times I cross a dark most near them. I’ve been a long time now

     From walls, that grip of certain.

  There are such vanishings inside each quiet. So many plurals and veerings, so much away—

  As waxen cells imprinted

  And then inwardly each question presses hard

     Against the curious hollows and the sharp and yets. It’s what I felt that first

  Frigid winter when the early carefulness

  Crumbled (that new land)—and then the long afterwards began—

     Of snow mounding on the overhangs of roofs pocked as waxen cells

  Imprinted with the marks of bees’ jaws. And the questions rising in me, too,

     Were those rough marks, precise irregularities

  From which I knew I must set out—

     Into the insteads, into the odd (and yet I must) and roadless to the eye

  And curved and steep and coarse and keenly branching.

  This white unswaying place

  I’m sorry not to have written you sooner.

     We are peculiar forms, like someone’s old papers rifled quickly through

  But not read before the burning.

     How to speak of the icy cave-like place I lately feel,

  Its white reluctance dividing me from all things I desire and see.

     I think it must often be the case

  That one holds within oneself a guardedness, expectant, steeply quarried,

     The way mistakes grow magnified inside the mind, spiked and sharply gleaming.

  How skilled, how dominant, this white unswaying place.

     And I wonder how, bred from our churning, it constructs itself so strongly

  Like the crush of light I sometimes at the noonhour hear.

  A ragged fabric

  And then the mind begins to starve itself. As if the brain clefts were giving back their networks,

     All their tensile webs. Unsafe the worldspeed and the scalded

  Warnings. Quiet as errors in genetic script

     Or handcuffs left rusting on a table, the folds and softs

  Are vanished from the air. Shock knits a ragged fabric. Ea
ch move leads into

  Ambush and undone.

  The Tenth Remove

  Morning light unsealing over the river. Widening sky.

     Such an odd species we are that locks itself up, or locks itself in from within.

  Wardened and opposed. The eyes are such curious creatures and yet. Tempted, drawing back.

  There are now thirty of us sick, and deaths among us daily. May 7th, Sarah Lydle, whose name was Braint

     When she was taken, and who married during this our captivity, died, and on the 13th, Mr. Smead’s son Daniel

  Died, and Christian Tether on the 14th. I am grown very weak. The prison is made of stone and lime.

  Hazard wanders over itself, charts and marks its own body. Excisions. Deletions.

     In the sky, so much of further, so much of lost.

  Each view intercepted

  Like the fretting of blades closing

     I feel a sense of my own disappearing as it rises inside me. How hot it grows,

  Tin-bright then notched like the river in torrent; breaks in the rocks are dark eyes.

     The sky behind me reclines like an Egyptian king,

  Gold-edged and final.

  Inside has odd ways: so much cutting away

     In the thinking of, in each view intercepted by instead, the sharpened bolts

  Of looking back. I’m releasing into shadows I can’t know. Tall larches by the river

 

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