Tag: Mischa Willet poetry

  • Poetry: Mischa Willett

    Medea’s Hymn
    from Ovid

    O guardian of the dark, keeper of creeping
    shadows, o night I’m standing in…
    And you, timid stars, who wait for her arrival
    to shine…

    And you, Hecate, Hecate, Hecate,

    who knows and keeps the herbal secrets,
    the potion’s potency, the rites of sorcery…
    And you, Earth, who grows the elements,
    you world of winds and waters, you gods
    of woods and watchers of the dead, I need
    you all.

    It is through your power that I have reversed
    the river’s current as the mute banks gaped.
    Haven’t we stilled the trashing seas,
    convened councils of clouds, bagged and shook
    out the very winds? With words I’ve split
    a writhing serpent, drawn down boulders,
    plucked an oak as easily as a flower. I can
    shake the very mountains and open
    the mouth of the ground in a groan. The shades
    I can make walk from their tombs. Even you,
    noon, I can drop in this stream like a white pebble.
    The sun, my grandfather’s carriage,
    I can sing pale. I can staunch the wound
    even of pink dawn.

    But it is you, who, helping me,
    tarnished the bronze of the bulls and bent
    their necks to plow. And you who tangled
    the serpent’s scions and saved my Jason
    in the ring. And it is you who, singing
    through him, put that watchful and wise
    beast to his first sleep, and so brought
    the golden fleece—power of powers—
    to Greece.

     

    In a Dark Wood

    Why am I so jealous of the duck
    That has been swallowed by the wolf?
    Because he has slippers
    and a peg on which to hang his coat
    and a rug on which to place the slippers?

    In the same way, I wish I was the bunny,
    always, but especially in Spring,
    because I think of his hook,
    and the tree he’s in
    and the snow outside
    and all the hawks he doesn’t
    hear hunting, until he does.

     

    The Holding Pattern
    “Just then a plane jumped up and ripped the sky to shreds”
    -K. Vonnegut

    The F-12 fighter jet jumps
    through a hole in the wall
    at the café, at the museum, at the lunch
    I am enjoying, at the moment
    I am thinking of saying the bit about
    my animal’s charging hard
    and my man’s restraining grip—
    the whip he uses to keep
    the beast at bay—
    how his forearms tire, how
    his fingers ply at the leash.

    The line was its own pastiche
    of images—the broken clause, dramatic
    pauses meant to make the thing sound
    ex temporae—like I hadn’t come
    up with it the day before, like I
    hadn’t been dying to say it for its sharp
    “ar” sound from “hard” and how that slammed
    into “charged” and made the thing
    sound sexed and desperate, as indeed,
    I meant it.

    This before the razor-winged marten
    whose dive-bomb corkscrew threw an element
    of reverie into an afternoon I’d mapped
    out as heartful, profound, became
    in the turn, her bright laughing’s
    little explosions on the ground.

    Feature Image: J. M. W. Turner’s Vision of Medea (1828).