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Writer's pictureYours Truly

Ophelia's Lament

Updated: Jul 4, 2019



~


I. The Funeral


Take the rosemary

they have pressed between my toes

and use it to garnish

your next glass of wine.

As you drink

make a toast,

not to merriment,

but to lamentation–

to the remembrance

of thy maiden’s death.


Cheers! to the unity

of our most unwavering

disgrace.


Cheers to what

has been broken.


In a fit of maddening remorse–

for this time the madness shall be tangible–

tear away the silk

lining of this

damned funeral bed

like you did tear

away the curtain and what

hid behind it.


Tear it away!


Tear it away like you did

tear the rat,

like you did tear and discard

the honour that did lie

between thy maiden’s legs,

like the river’s rapids

did tear away thy maiden's life.


And once you have

sheathed your sword–

I entreat you–

kneel and bow your head

in surrender to the lilies

that lie before my grave;

you will caress their stems

and kiss their petals

in the hopes that

your love–the love

you did deny me–

will breathe life back

into these water-logged lungs.


But just as it is certain

that the flowers,

in their cyclical phases

of nature,

must bloom,

it is also certain that the dead

must remain dead.


For there is nothing so definite

as the blooming

just as there is nothing so definite

as the dying.


–Post Madness


II. The Drowning 


My gown billows around

me like the slick ripple

of a mermaid’s fin.


I can hear the Lady Siren’s Song

and all of its guarantees:

liberation of this life’s

betrayals and heartbreaks,

liberation procured

by the certainty of death.


I suck the nectar of her voice,

drinking in every crescendo–

every last staccato–

of what the water has

promised me.

I suck the nectar of her voice

as I had so foolishly

suckt at the honey of his

music vows,

the same way

his own babe would

have suckt the milk

from the swell of my breast–

my babe to be

that shall never be

drowned by my sodden womb,

my babe whose mother–

certain in what proved to be

the uncertainty

of her lord’s love–

conceived him in a bed of sin,

a bed of dishonour.


So now, my sweet child,

I do not object

to the deluge that

threatens to drag us

beneath the current,

for perhaps

this is the only way

to put the dishonour to

rest.


So float with me,

my sweet nymph,

and let us both dissolve

into spirits of the river.


–The Pinnacle of Madness


III. The Heartbreak 


I, A maid at your window,

mouth glittering in anticipation

for your sweet, valentined kiss.



To the celestial and my soul’s idol, the most beautified Ophelia…


And so up you rose

to unlatch the chamber door–

to meet the nestle of

soft, petaled lips.


Doubt thou the stars are fire


Doublet unbraced,

you undressed

and to this,  My Lord, I

so willingly followed.



Doubt that the sun doth move


Corset loosened and

gown discarded

with you,  I did lay down.


Doubt truth be a liar,


So certain I was of your love,

that sin no longer daunted me.


But never doubt I love.


And certainly I was proven wrong,

for in the escapade of our passion

we did touch so dishonourably.


–Pre-Madness (The Inciting Incident)

 

Image Source:

Rose and Milk Bath (n.d). [image] Available at: https://pagans-witches.aminoapps.com/page/blog/rose-bath-spell/wKLe_VRWiouWjnwpQQenjY2KRjLj5bKxRgV [Accessed 25 Jul. 2018].

 
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