KUNDALINI RISING:
Songs of Power and Spirit

by Honora Finkelstein

Back Home Up Next

DEJA VU

They (the arbiters of taste and art and literature,
Bestowers of the benison of fame)
They  say, "One cannot be a poet
Unless he has a certain sense of place--
A knowledge of his 'roots,'
An understanding of the heritage from which he's sprung!"
And they  delight in affectatious dialect--
A drawl or twang or brogue to demonstrate they have been graced
With sufficient overlay of place
To bear the title "poet."

"But what," I ask, in my quietest, most self-effacing manner,
"What of the certain sense of self?
Does that not give me the right to write?"

For the "sense of place" is sometimes--often--more than I can bear--
I have been many places, and I find that everywhere
I go, I know, yes, know  that I have been before.
Each new hamlet a homecoming to my self--
Sometimes bountiful . . .
Sometimes painful . . .

 

Beneath the wheels of the carriage,
I watched my sweet husband die--
His blood on the wet cobblestones not red--
Becoming dirty pinkish gray in the Paris gutter,
Transmuted by the rain . . .

Chanting the Latin words,
I knelt, and scoured the worn, grey stones,
Murmuring prayers at Evensong--
Et benedictus, fructus ventris tui Jesus--
Quietly yearning for the joy
Of some sweet woman's smile . . .

An ancient squaw
With withered breasts and wrinkled parchment face,
I yearned for the pleasure of not being owned
By my husband's whim--
Haggard and venerable,
I practiced and learned to love
Sweet discipline . . .

Trim, muscular, the image in the mirror says
"I am the Fencing Master of all France;
The Dauphin's in my charge--
My Wheel of Fortune risen to its zenith"--

I died in prison, naked, whipped, and bleeding,
Thighs pinioned wide,
For all the churlish guards
To take their pleasure . . .

I died in bed--
The woman under me was not my wife,
But a harlot who'd agreed to let me take my ease
For two loaves of my best bread . . .

Demure maiden, face whited with rice powder . . .

Brave general, envy of his troops,
Devourer of the Hittites . . .

And so it goes.
My Self weighs heavy on me.

To the arbiters of art and fame, I say:
Each  place I go, I feel with certainty
The intimations of my immortality.

And for sweet Keats' sake . . .
Whatever happened to
Negative capability?

 


TOC
Table of Contents

KUNDALINI RISING

A Poetry Chapbook
by
Honora Finkelstein

© 1997

Buy this chapbook
for only $7.50

Secure Online Shopping with PayPal