Showing posts with label Julia Copus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Julia Copus. Show all posts

Friday, August 12, 2011

Breaking the Rule


Breaking the Rule

I. The Art of Illumination



At times it is a good life, with the evening sun

gilding the abbey tower, the brook's cold waters



sliding past and every hour in my Book

a blank page, vellum pumice-stoned



to chalky lustres which my inks suffuse:

saffron and sandarach and dragon's blood,



azure and verdigris. Monsters and every type of beast

curl round the words. Each man here has a past,



and each man reasons for his faith. I wronged

a woman once and nothing I did after could atone



or throw a light upon the blackness of that deed,

whose harm lay in the telling, not the doing.



My floor is strewn with thyme and rosemary

to mask the odours of my craft – fish glue,



gum resins, vinegar and oils. With these I shape

the hosts of the redeemed, and every face



takes on the features of a face I've known

and every angel's face beneath the shadow



of its many coloured wings is hers alone.





II. The Art of Signing



There are ways among the stone and shadow

of our cloisters to transgress the Rule. We speak



in signs: a language with no syntax.

For the sign of bread you make a circle



with your thumbs and index fingers – like a belt

that presses silk against a woman's waist.



For the sign of an eel squeeze each hand tight

as one who grasps a cord of hair to kiss



that one mouth only in the frantic din

of the ale-house where we used to dance,



and later outside with the grainy dusk

unloading a sough of foot-falls in my ear,



our four feet shuffling together

and in time across the quiet earth.



The rhythm of my days goes slower now:

matins and lauds, vespers and compline.



For the sign of silence put a finger

to the dry muscle of your mouth,



the darkness that's inside it. Keep it there

Thursday, August 11, 2011

In Defence of Adultery



In Defence of Adultery

We don’t fall in love: it rises through us
the way that certain music does –
whether a symphony or ballad –
and it is sepia-coloured,
like spilt tea that inches up
the tiny tube-like gaps inside
a cube of sugar lying by a cup.
Yes, love’s like that: just when we least
needed or expected it
a part of us dips into it
by chance or mishap and it seeps
through our capillaries, it clings
inside the chambers of the heart.
We’re victims, we say: mere vessels,
drinking the vanilla scent
of this one’s skin, the lustre
of another’s eyes so skilfully
darkened with bistre. And whatever
damage might result we’re not
to blame for it: love is an autocrat
and won’t be disobeyed.
Sometimes we manage
to convince ourselves of that.







© 2003, Julia Copus
From: In Defence of Adultery
Publisher: Bloodaxe, Newcastle, 2003