Friday, June 07, 2024

THE CHILDHOOD OF MARCEL PROUST (REPOSTED DUE TO REFORMATTING, FINAL VERSION)

 

THE CHILDHOOD OF MARCEL PROUST

 your teacup brims with starry light, rich

traceries of time - translucent as
fresh raspberries bought


on a day by M. Swann


heaped on fairytale plates that chime
when the scenes shine through


somewhat berry-stained.


bright doves float through your
stained glass hands through

opaline rosaries of the rain and


tuned to a strange cessation


in a dream we almost see
the glint of (home):


taking the madeline


dipped in snow
and a nectared universe...


your linden angels pause, mid-air


cognizant of a pale green rustling
but no one's there


just once to say:


Good night, dream's child,
you'll sleep the steeple


out of the sky's


late roses at Combray
and wonder how


it all turned into


stalactite colors overnight
dripping down winter walls


sweet candle-wax and pure


resurgences of rain.


but the 13th guest arrives


mid-scene to no
gold place setting


set with rubies


and who can still the lime-leafed - unrestrained-
lamentation of the rain...


your hawthorn branches


in the dusk
its storied snowy paths more dear


to lead you out of houses here-


this suddenly - no longer home.
but you're still writing when the angels come


the rose-torn chanson of the rain


scratched out, then blooming once again;
they wait for you to finish up


fanning themselves with their crystal haloes


distracted by your clouds of sheer Limoges...


mixing the pink or is it blue


tinctures of remaining skies
you turn to ask them


just to stall:


the peacock or mimosa?
but God turns down the flaring wick


color by color almost


regretfully.
the angels turn:


fiery medallions on their sleeves


like Christmas refractions
most intensely felt,


a silken step...


and mama comes
with a bunch of heliotrope


a fugitive smile then


"Marcel!"
blue violet banks off creamy distances.


prevail in Heaven now


when childhood fears are hushed
and the holy candles lit forever


from hawthorn petals in your hands


you clutched at the last moment
afraid to let go.


how would you ever leave them here-


all your white orchards,
where Beauty's often not revered


along the via dolorosa


and breaks the thin importunate glaze
on a lake of half-way frozen


lies.


and lost and lost


where mirrors on the
other side


can't give the key-light back


of cherished nacre


anymore.


but the phrase in rainbow clarity appears


through veils and veils of summer rain
and this gardenia darkness knows that


every time the music's played.


it rushes on...


mary angela douglas 29-31 may; 1 june 2010

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