Motion Sickness

                  I am tired of the heave and swell,
                  the deep lunge in the belly, the gut's
                  dumb show of dance and counterdance,
                  sway and pause, the pure jig of nausea
                  in the pit of a spinning world.
                  Where the body moves, the mind
                  often lags, clutching deck, anchor,
                  the gray strap that hangs like the beard
                  of death from the train's ceiling,
                  the mind lost in the slow bulge
                  of ocean under the moon's long pull
                  or the endless coil of some medieval
                  argument for the existence of God
                  or the dream of the giant maze
                  that turns constantly in and in
                  on itself and there is no way out . . . 
                  I am sick and tired of every rise and fall
                  of the sun, the moon's tedious cycle
                  that sucks blood from the thighs of women
                  and turns teenage boys into wolves
                  prowling the streets, hungry for motion.
                  Let me be still, let me rest
                  in some hollow of space and time
                  far from the seasons and that boring,
                  ponderous drama of day and night.
                  Let me sleep in the heart of calm
                  and dream placidly of birds frozen
                  in the unmoving air of eternity
                  and the earth grown immobile
                  in its centrifugal spin, and God
                  motionless as Lazarus in his tomb
                  before he is raised dizzily
                  to fall again, to rise, to fall.


                  B.H. Fairchild  (Click for bio.)

Current Issue | Mystic No. 2 Contents |