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> THE PAIN OF DREAMING, The bliss of pain is the touch of truth
JaxMyth
post Nov 11 07, 20:12
Post #1


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Hidden from the grip of mangrove roots
my song was born. I gave her breath
and she woke to the slap of the making tide.
The men heard her and they became shadows
on the face of the moon with their hands on fire.
We ran from the rocks and the roar and the crack
but the fingers of the lightning men found us.
She fled from my mouth on a frantic wing
and keened to the gorge where the river chuckles
and the echoes tell sweet lies.

The men called on the sun to wake and find her but the sun would not, so the men grew angry and swallowed him. They twitched long spears onto their arms and legs and twirled through clouds of dust to change into birds; and as birds they went hunting. The sea-birds found her and the kingfishers caught her and the song-birds took her and the lyre-birds sang her to the crows and ravens; but the crows and ravens hated beauty and the eagle ripped her leaving little for the butcher-birds to hang in the thorns of a tree.

The women caught me, crying on the ebb,
drifting back on the falling water.
They pulled me out and beat me hard.
“Your song wasn’t true, she needed death
We know truth and truth is pain.
Women have wept the ocean’s water.”


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Merlin
post Nov 12 07, 22:39
Post #2


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From: Time, Immoral
Member No.: 66
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This is very interesting, Jax.
I'm unfamiliar with the form, but my guess is that it's a prose poem. It definitely fits into open form writing.

In L3, I'm wondering if you've chosen the best modifier for the tide - my choice would not be with "making". Several come to mind which appear stronger and livelier.

At the end of V2, you state "the thorns of a tree", which, to my mind, would sound better simply as "the thorn trees", not to confused with the book & mini TV series. Those were the thornbirds, weren't they?

There are images of Kalevela that appear while reading. That's a rather voluminous, Finnish saga. One fellow went and stole a wife from another tribe, and when she wouldn't stop squawking, he turned her into a seagull.

There tis.

Merlin


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JaxMyth
post Nov 19 07, 19:18
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Member No.: 408
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Hi Merlin,

QUOTE (Merlin @ Nov 13 07, 14:39 ) [snapback]104283[/snapback]
This is very interesting, Jax.
I'm unfamiliar with the form, but my guess is that it's a prose poem. It definitely fits into open form writing.

Accentual Tet the central section was also the same but I felt it worked better as a whole..

In L3, I'm wondering if you've chosen the best modifier for the tide - my choice would not be with "making". Several come to mind which appear stronger and livelier.

The 'making' tide, the flood tide, the rising tide, the in-flowing tide, but here is a tide midwifing song, a maker.

At the end of V2, you state "the thorns of a tree", which, to my mind, would sound better simply as "the thorn trees", not to confused with the book & mini TV series. Those were the thornbirds, weren't they?

But these are not thorn trees, there are many native Australian trees with thorns and these are used by butcher birds to impale gobbets of meat or whole carcases for future use.

There are images of Kalevela that appear while reading. That's a rather voluminous, Finnish saga. One fellow went and stole a wife from another tribe, and when she wouldn't stop squawking, he turned her into a seagull.

There tis.

Merlin


This is a tale, my own in part, set in the Dreamtime.

Thanks for commenting, it is appreciated as always,

Jax


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