like the Vírgen
de la Caridad in El Cobre,
its mines buried in the cliff,
streets strung with bells
like the torsos of birds
hung upside down, waiting
to startle the tourists. They
say at night Our Lady slips
from her altar to swim
with the river goddess
before returning, wet and
gleaming. Each September
a procession lights the way
through the winding lanes
of El Cobre, arms laden with
girasoles, every face turning
to glimpse the Madonna
perched atop her moon and
star. Gold robes—handspun
by Spanish nuns—falling
from her shoulders; at her
breast the child who holds
the world in his hands turn-
ing—another bell. On a
kitchen floor a priestess
shakes sixteen cowries from
her pouch, records the way
they fall—mouth up, mouth
down—to her mat, each
impenitent slit a remembering,
an invocation, an invitation
to know herself both as answer
and question. Your own hands
folded, white-gloved in your
lap, neither object nor spirit—
a paper crane about to dive,
about to rise from the deep.
Your bangled wrists chiming
like the river. Your lips,
dusted with holy water, aching
to speak some truth. Each turn
of your tongue a siren, a gong.
An incantation calling you to dive
deeper. Open. Leave nothing
but the sound of yourself ringing.
~
My Mother in Havana is available for preorder
Beautiful work: “…lips dusted with holy water…” Takes my breath away, simply gorgeous.
Wonderful! What the Cowries tell us…