Poetry in April -- in celebration |
In the bed and breakfast, at Monticello, where they say folks without forms glide down into guests’ rooms on the orders of great Duke Costello where things tune out of time, and the earth is but a stone with clouds electrified and lights go out at the faintest intercept, and present entangles with the past. While my room is still and armoire lifeless, night-table holds coins, keys, pearl earrings and window’s open, and an abalone moon casts glances at hazy kudzu on oak branches. Not to last but for a few brief seconds, love comes to me from an unexplored territory with Duke Costello, his long hair in curls, a high-waisted silhouette in breeches who scoops up my icy depths with a bow then vanishes shimmering into a universe boundless and multiform. Such grandeur, such nobility, only without a body or limbs. He is not my ephemeral invention for his essence is free from the defective clock of time, which goes berserk with a secret or two, and I, too, with a tangled verse wish to slip, longing, into his solitude. Now, you tell me, how else could I interpret this vision when the soft mattress under me creaked in the bed and breakfast, at Monticello, where they say folks without forms glide down into guests’ rooms? Note: My husband and I stayed for two weeks in 2009 in a haunted bed and breakfast in Monticello, Florida, not to mix up with Monticello, Virginia. Although I didn’t see or hear anything, I always felt the seclusion and the stillness of the place. I thought about that place, John Denham House, while having fun with this prompt. ==== Prompt: ghost, ghostly |