Hela

The Dark One Told Me This

She was fearfully voluptuous, bloody

as a shocking train wreck, like

the essences washed from the floor

of the abattoir at the end of the day.

 

And I read the story of my death

in Her lambent eye, read my own

passions and pain there

in the upturned palm She held out.

 

She told me, Child, there is no life

undimmed by tears, no road whose surface

isn’t sharp and jagged at times with stones

slashing your tender, hurting soles.

 

There is no misery I have not witnessed,

stored like an unholy gem in the human heart,

or else blindly tossed out for the wild winds to carry

like so many dust motes sparkling in sunlight.

 

There is breath after breath,

the motion of your body from moment

to moment, forward and ever in time

until the day you die, and beyond.

 

There is the rising from the earth

where your sore and battered body falls

after each tremendous blow,

after your eyes squeeze shut in agony, then slowly open.

 

There is that knowledge that sorrow

wears many faces, and that some of these

can be slapped into submission

or forgetfulness, while others cannot.

 

And if you find cause for despair in this,

you are missing the point:

when pain sticks its needle into you,

this is not My deathblow, or My curse;

 

it is My lesson to you, little one,

that the raging ocean has no power

and the glow of love has no shimmer

without that fine edge of darkness.

 

Do not fear suffering, She told me,

for My blessing to you is courage

which bursts forth in its thousand-petaled loveliness

from the raw stink of loss and betrayal.

 

Do not fear Me, She said, holding

the tip of Her sword at my breast,

for it is better to rush upon this blade now

than to shrink away from life, in fear.

 

And I hold Her gaze, and Her bloodstained hands

rest on my head in benediction,

and I have not thrown myself forward

upon the blade She holds at my heart.