Poem: 'Lady Anne'

 by Dawn Sands





The figure

spun by shadows

suspended in time

encroaches on your door.

Your husband’s blood

entertains his playful hands.

 

The veil of the past and of the future

falls about your face,

and the noise of the country’s mourning

infiltrates the silence of your own:

descending scales of the harshest bells

resound throughout the city

and as the figure advances

the church clock chimes the half hour.

The faint white line around your left fourth finger

must be redressed.

 

The shadow draws nearer

crooked smile crooked gait crooked heart

locked hideously, irrevocably

in tandem with yours.

Your averted eyes spark

with electric tears

that must not flow,

for you must stand defiant—

yet you cannot hide from the man

who sees through everything,

whose mind is like

clockwork;

who can draw a breath

and within an hour summon the sunlight

that turns the veil from black to white.

 

You must not be

his wanton ambling nymph.

You will hurl at him

that lightning electricity

scald him with your words

and yet

in the town, those harsh church bells

modulate 

into a major key.

 

He will lend you none of his false tears

only pitiless piousness

and nimble seductiveness,

a furnace hot enough to melt

a heart of stone.

 

And as he bears you away

down the rose-lined sordid track to hell

the toll of the hour of your reckoning

grows ever louder.

The veil falls from your face

and disappears into smoke,

elusive, grey.

The clock stops ticking

the bells start chiming

and the shadow

slinks crookedly 

away.


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