The Scroll of Anatiya. Zoë Klein. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Zoë Klein
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Религия: прочее
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781498275279
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I ever made such a vow!

      51The wind bears them onto the heights

      and I gather them, every one, like a bundle of grain. 52I tie them together with my arms. They fall over me in a swath of black silk. 53You lower your eyes and the world reappears. 54You might never look to me again, but it matters not. 55I am cast into the depths, into the heartbeat of the sea. 56Your sweetest floods engulf me and lovely breakers and billows sweep above me. 57Your waters close in over me. I drink them in! I sink to the base of the mountains, rocking gently as a feather from a great height, weeds twine around my head, and I rest on the kelp of the ocean floor, soft and pure. 58As many stars are in the Heavens is as many cubits deep am I, deep in love, drowning in dreaming.

      8

      All at once ~wrote Anatiya ~ my bones are seeped with understanding. 2Were you the child who peeked into the room? 3Suddenly the illusions of this life are torn out of their graves and exposed to the blazing sun. 4All is layers, layers of meanings, existing together in the subtlest of harmony. 5My ears are suddenly tuned in to these intricacies of music and meaning. 6In this stationary rock I see a parade of activity. In the white core of the sun I see all colors. 7I now hear your words, which I have loved from afar, which I have heard addressed always to others and never to me, I now hear them in layers. 8I hear you speaking to me, almost courting, softly and tearfully, explaining to me, gently, the nature of being. 9Do you love me? Have you always loved me? 10On the surface you speak of the wicked folk, but underneath you tickle me with fantasies, with the voice of the bridegroom rejoicing over his bride.

      11What you say to them they cannot interpret,

      but I now see the myriad meanings

      you heap upon the precious crown of the letter yud.

      12I am now wise to the betrayal of sight!

      13Eve saw that the fruit was a delight to the eyes,

      and even so when she ate, her eyes were opened!

      14There are so many layers to seeing,

      the deepest of which is called insight.

      15We are born with only the barest level of sight.

      We are basically blind,

      and ego is our stumbling block.

      16I surrender my ego to loving you,

      I surrender my being to love,

      and at once my eyes are opened

      and I see that we are naked,

      and I see that we are alone

      under a lush

      canopy of trees

      on a plush

      carpet of dewy grass.

      17Your fingers taste

      sixty times sweeter than honey.

      18Rivers wind through the whole land

      and God’s voice is here, strolling.

      Fruit hangs with heavy pulp

      sticky on our hands

      and in our lips.

      19Your lips are crimson.

      Your body is gold

      and seamless.

      20A bed of blossoms

      and beams of cedar

      and cypress.

      The flutter of a turtledove.

      21My eyes are opened and I see

      even deeper than Eve.

      I see that I want to stay here,

      I am not eager to leave.

      22I love this clear-water wellspring.

      I love this frankincense forest.

      I have no trace of wanderlust.

      23I spin the two cherubs

      with their fiery swords

      around and around

      until they are dizzy

      and giddy

      and drunk on my rapture,

      24so they think they are keeping us out,

      but in truth they are keeping us in.

      25I am wise to the deception of sight.

      I see in this desert

      there is the ghost of an ocean

      26I see in this Temple

      there is the Tower of Babel,

      scratching at Heaven’s

      glassy surface.

      27The House that bears His Name

      is defiled to make a name for ourselves.

      28God is pulling back His bow

      like an archer.

      His arrow is a foreign nation.

      29He will scatter us soon

      over the face of the earth.

      He will confound our language

      and confuse our tongue.

      30I hear you weeping,

      “All is not well.”

      31You know that we are naked and

      only you and I are blushing.

      32Only you and I are wise

      to the flagrant bond between

      shame

      and joy.

      ~wrote Anatiya.

      33I will not harvest the corners of our love

      ~wrote Anatiya

      34but let the poor gather up grapes

      and baskets of purple-hearted figs.

      35I will toss morsels to the loveless throngs

      as into a wishing well.

      36Why do they sit by

      with their heads bowed

      and eyes lowered?

      37Let them gather and search

      for the fountain of youth

      in the midst of the city,

      and drink from its glistening draft.

      38Sated in its dew

      they will never die old,

      but sing and dance into Sheol

      a thousand years young.

      39Lo, my kisses I will pile upon my palm like pollen on a petal,

      and blow them to you on a sweet gust of my breath

      that they might germinate in your pores.

      ~wrote Anatiya.

      40Your head is the chief cornerstone of the Temple

      upon which bears down an unbearable wall.

      41My heart is shattered when I see you crumble.

      God’s wrath is a poisoned well in your gut

      rumbling up into your throat. Vile taste!

      42Where is our mikvah of pure living waters?

      43Hark! The outcry of my poor prophet!

      The mountains tremble.

      The Temple walls shudder and quake.