Showing posts with label Dusk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dusk. Show all posts

Monday, November 3, 2014

THE SECOND DAY



Towards dusk on the second day
About when green turns to black
A dog started from the road
And followed close at my heels
Until dawn when it faded away
Except for its shadow which I saw
Companying me still. My father
Could speak with dogs and they
Would come from distant towns
Seeking his counsel for their woes.

Friday, October 17, 2014

BOARDING DUSK'S BOAT



Before the beginning of things, Day and Night were simply ideas, in perfect balance. This Earth was meant to always bask in Day’s light, or to while away eternity unraveling the mysteries of Night. Some accuse Day, or what would be Day once Time began, of stealing Night away and ravishing her. Others say that Night seduced Day, or that Night pitied Day’s bright burning certainties and gave her the gift of darkness. However it happened – and there are many more tales than these – in the end there was nothing to be done but to leave this world of ours a wonder and jest, where Day and Night both rule.

Their children are born uneasy and do not speak to each other. They are fey and beautiful and quite dangerous, and lead wayfarers astray. There are worlds where it is always dawn, or always dusk, and if you chose your moment, or have the fortune to have your moment chose you, they will take you to one. If the mood strikes, they may sometime bring you home.

My business was urgent and would brook no delay, yet I was no longer of those who are welcome to ride in the great Ship of Day. Neither could I comport myself as one who expects to be carried in the Moon’s arms as she makes her journey, attended by her resplendent lords and ladies. Dusk, though .. Dusk can be approached by anyone, if you chose your moment well.

So I stood at a slant to the grey hour and saw Dusk coming, poling his flat boat along himself. No great gods pull at oars for Dusk, nor does his boat run of itself for very love. Sundry dreams, as always, were trailing their toes in the water, for Dusk never refuses them a ride. Strange it was to see a great grizzled nightmare sitting amicably next to a small dream of mine which I had forgotten long ago. They had no common tongue, and spoke to each other in signs.

Monday, June 23, 2014

AN EXTRACT FROM A TRIP ON DUSK'S BOAT



We watched the shore for a while in the half-light. Dusk’s eyes glowed like a cat’s by a fire. Moving with the current, we only had to use our poles from time to time to steer clear of rocks and shoals. I asked him when he slept, since someone must always guide his boat. He pointed towards a figure I hadn’t noticed before, lying by some barrels.
“Why, I am sleeping right now, over there, and quite comfortably, my feet in some dream’s lap. If you look sharp though, you’ll probably find me pacing the deck as well; I am often plagued by insomnia.”
Dusk was speaking to me, yet at the same time he came walking towards us from the boat’s rear. “It’s no use,” he said, “I can’t get to sleep. I’ll take the other pole, Westerly, and you had best talk with that dream of yours. You’ll both be going ashore soon.”
When I left them, Dusk looked sidelong for an instant and nodded, as if some suspicion had been confirmed. As I walked away he was talking to himself about the weather.
I suddenly remembered my dream’s name; he was called Scoggin, and lifted his head when I spoke it.
“Lord, now there’s a name I’ve not heard in a while! I wouldn’t have thought any knew it now.”
He was whittling a chain of links from a piece of ivory, cutting very precisely and cleanly, with economic long strokes of a sharp knife.
“It’s for a child,” he said. “She’ll dream tonight that it was given to her, and find it in her hand when she wakes up. The road she’ll walk will lead to places the Fates mean her never to go.”
“Great Zeus Himself cannot defy the Fates, I’ve been told.”
“Nor can he, being Great Zeus. Dreams, however, are not wholly subject to the Fates. Drives them crazy, I shouldn’t wonder, especially the one with the shears”


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