Monday, November 30, 2009

A Phoenix Within

by R. C. Faith


Beast Tamer, Beast Tamer,

Who shall reap thy fate?

Save from evil, the land we dwell,

Or will it be too late?

Descendant of Night,

Born of Day,

Two worlds apart,

He will dwell,

Light and Dark.

Tortured past.

But memories lost,

Well hidden away,

Are afraid of the dark,

And even the day,

Bring us Hope,

In this dire time,

Can you cope?

And with new strength,

Can your will,

Be fierce as fire?

The night is long,

To darkness drawn,

Can you quell,

The forces strong,

That come so soon.

Hopeless songs,

They will sing,

The fight be futile,

Without wings.

War be hard,

Lives be lost,

Hope must triumph,

At any cost.

Death by kin shall be his end,

Betrayal by his dearest friend.

-Legend of the Beast Tamer

Silver moonlight washed over dense woods, leaving a glow on all it touched. Thick branches swayed in the breeze and the leaves, for once, recoiled at its touch. The air, unlike it’s usual pureness and sweet scents of the woods, stung the lungs of all who inhaled. It had been tainted because Fire and Earth were fighting once again, and Wind had stepped in to try and stop the conflict.

The smoke rose like a black snake in the sky. It was a total black against the silver-outlined trees. Fire as raven as a piece of starless night lapped up the trees greedily. Wooden huts and lean-to’s caught flame and fed the snake in the sky. People fled their homes, abandoning all they had. Some clutched frail, wailing babes to their breast while others dragged loved ones from the heat.

This fire was easily no ordinary fire; it followed the people as if bewitched to kill them all. Once momentarily free form the flames, many touched the points of the Diamond of the Elements on their body: brow; left shoulder; right shoulder and chest. Then they pressed a fist to the centre of the diamond, at their collarbone, to signal the final two elements. All too quickly they had to flee further while they watched their beloved home burn.

A young man, hardly the age of twenty and one years, scrambled through the brush. Already he cried for the flame had touched his heel and now it was burning from the inside out, making his skin black and bubbled. In his arms was a child with bright blue eyes and fresh tears and screams. With a shout, the man fell but rolled so he landed on his side rather than his child. He forced himself to his feet, hearing the roar of the fire not too far behind, and hobbled as fast as he could.

Already his vision was failing and pain was his only thought. The fire closed in as he strained his body into a run.

Above, a young child flew in the sky and watched the massacre. She laughed loudly and then disappeared into the column of smoke.


[Fiction: Fantasy/Adventure - Published: 12-11-06 from :www.fictionpress.com]

Saturday, November 21, 2009

The String Beans

By Edmond Séchan

The old woman lives and works in a dark building in Paris. On a sewing machine as aged as she is, she makes evening bags, handbags with pearl embroidery and silver fringe, for elegant ladies and festive occasions.

Every morning and evening the old woman works. But for a short time in the afternoon, when the weather is pleasant, she closes her sewing machine, takes her handbag – an ordinary one – and goes out.

She has followed the same path for many years, through the gardens, near where she lives. As she walks slowly around the impeccable flowerbeds, she dreams of her childhood gardens, filled with the perfume of peonies and lilacs.

On her way home one evening, she sees a discarded flowerpot. The azalea it holds is dead. Still the soil is good and the pot can be used, so the lady carries it upstairs. A flowerpot. Some earth. Good. She holds the pot close, her eyes shining.

In the precious earth she plants one bean from among those chosen for her dinner and sets the pot on the window-sill. Every day she waters the soil. To her amazement, two leaves appear, then a third. To support the tender sprig, the old lady ties its stem to a knitting needle, stuck in the pot with some yarn.

But enemies appear. A neighbour above shakes dust from his rug down on the bean on the window-sill. Pigeons peck at the leaves and will not be chased away. The old lady decides to move the plant, but there is not enough sun in her room. So she puts the flowerpot out on the landing. She must keep moving the pot as the patch of sun moves. Sometimes she forgets and neglects it. Sometimes she goes to the landing and neglects her work.

Then she has an idea. One walks dogs and children. Why not string beans? So she takes her plant to the garden. In the garden there are sun and water. And sitting on a bench each day, she watches the plant as it starts to become green.

But the walks are brief, because she must work. Back in the dark building the leaves begin to fall. The old lady makes a decision. Early one morning she carries her string bean to the garden, and plants it behind a hedge in the midst of luxurious flowers. Afterwards, a little tired, she rests on the bench. She is happy. Without anyone knowing, she has saved a plant, a life.

Missing the familiar presence of the few green leaves, the old lady leaves her lonely room and each day goes discreetly to see her plant. With enough sun and water, drawing strength from the rich earth, the string bean grows, blossoms, seeds.

Nobody knows it is hers, her own secret garden. She has saved it, and seeing it grow is her comfort and joy, day and night. Soon it reaches out above the hedge that has hidden it and kept it from harm.

One day she arrives to find gardeners at work, planting and pruning, clipping and cutting. She is just in time to see them approach her string bean. It’s presence upsets the harmony of the design. It is an intruder. She doesn’t dare rush in, to tell these men. She waits, her heart racing. And one of the gardener pulls out the string bean and throws it on the ground.

When the men leave for lunch and she is alone, the old lady gently lifts the broken plant. It is dead, and the leaves are already fading. She looks at it for a long time.

She picks some of the string beans and holds them in her hand as a bouquet. Quickly she returns to her room. She puts soil from the gardens in the pot, and in it plants three new seeds. Everything will begin again, as before, perhaps even better than before.

Behind her window, the old lady once again is on the look-out, her eyes fixed on the little pot of earth where the three little seeds sleep. This time she will know how to protect them, when to move them, when to bring them home. A healthy, quiet rain comes from the sky, falling gently on the pot and the life it contains….

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French movie maker Edmond Séchan’s, ‘The String Bean’ won the Golden Palm award for short films at the 1963 Canne film festival.

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Thursday, November 19, 2009

The Phoenix Within


by Phoenix Within


The End:
Phoenix lay on the hospital bed, her eyes closed. As her fever mounted she felt she was losing control of her being. She tried to regain control of herself mentally and to do so she thought about the life she had led and the people she had cared for. She had been a good wife, a caring mother. She had bourn a son as well as a daughter for her family, looked after her children well, watching them grow up, get married and settle down. Now, in her advanced years, the only thing she wanted to do was to relax and enjoy her retirement with things she loved doing – visiting friends, cooking, sewing, and watching television. Then the disease struck her. At first it was confusing. She would just fall down and could not get up. Within a few weeks she lost total control of her left side and was confined to her bed. The hospital visit, doctors, MRI, and then the biopsy followed. It confused her even more. This was not at all how she had planned to spent the rest of her life, straddled to a bed, a burden to her loved ones. She asked her daughter, the person she trusted most, mum, will I get well? And her daughter would always put her arms around her and tell her, you’ll be ok soon mum! She always believed her. She tried to move her left hand and to her enormous surprise, it moved. She got up. She was feeling light and much better. This is good, she thought. It was dark, but she felt as if she was walking in, no, she was in space. She was within space, and again, she was the space. The stars and planets her long lost friends were all there welcoming her back with laughter in their shine. As she floated towards them, she felt happy, happy, as happy as she had never ever felt before in her entire life.

The Burning:
As the funeral pyre burned and the flames leaped up towards the sky, Phoenix shuddered. She thought about the brain tumor, astrocytoma grade 4, that her mother had. There had been no headaches, no warning. Nothing except the mood swings and temper tantrums, which they always looked upon as part of her mother’s character and adjusted their lives around it, never a symptom of a disease. The diagnosis had been shattering and she had never been able to tell her mother what the doctors told her.

The Transformation:
Phoenix was hungry. She looked at her dad, as he cradled his one year old on his knees. She pulled at the hairs on his chest and touched his nipples with her tiny fingers. Her dad laughed, and his handsome face lit up as he admired his beautiful daughter. You want your mum, don’t you mum? Mummy da da, she said anxiously. Dad was nice and comfortable but she was thirsty and sleepy.

The Hope Within:
Much, much later, Phoenix could at last look up at her husband inquiringly and he smiled. She is asleep now. She was looking for you. She went to the bedroom with tired steps. Within the covers slept her little daughter, her face peaceful and doll-like. Her mother, the only one she had left now. She sat down on the bed and lovingly touched her little one’s chest.

My phoenix, she prayed, my mother, please God, some day may you soar..

Monday, November 16, 2009

The Flame Within

by Amy Sondova


My yesterdays were burned by Phoenix fire

Yet in the death’s ash, embers of hope remain

New dreams given birth in despair

Covered with ash, I mourn what was

To remember what will be no more

Then like the Phoenix I’ll rise

With renewed passion glowing red, yellow, orange

Ash will give way to flame

Like the Phoenix I’ll soar again

About the Phoenix

by James Merrill
 
But in the end one tires of the high-flown. 
If it were simply a matter of life or death 
We should by now welcome the darkening room, 
Wrinkling of linen, window at last violet, 
The rosy body lax in a chair of words, 
And then the appearance of unsuspected lights. 
We should walk wonderingly into that other world 
With its red signs pulsing and long lit lanes. 
But often at nightfall, ambiguous 
As the city itself, a giant jeweled bird 
Comes cawing to the sill, dispersing thought 
Like a birdbath, and with such final barbarity 
As to wear thin at once terror and novelty. 
So that a sumptuous monotony 
Sets in, a pendulum of amethysts 
In the shape of a bird, keyed up for ever fiercer 
Flights between ardor and ashes, back and forth; 
Caught in whose talons any proof of grace, 
Even your face, particularly your face 
Fades, featureless in flame, or wan, a fading 
Tintype of some cooling love, according 
To the creature’s whim. And in the end, despite 
Its pyrotechnic curiosity, the process 
Palls. One night 
Your body winces grayly from its chair, 
Embarks, a tearful child, to rest 
On the dark breast of the fulfilled past. 
The first sleep here is the sleep fraught 
As never before with densities, plume, oak, 
Black water, a blind flapping. And you wake 
Unburdened, look about for friends—but O 
Could not even the underworld forego 
The publishing of omens, naively? 
Nothing requires you to make sense of them 
And yet you shiver from the dim clay shore, 
Gazing. There in the lake, four rows of stilts 
Rise, a first trace of culture, shy at dawn 
Though blackened as if forces long confined 
Had smouldered and blazed forth. In the museum 
You draw back lest the relics of those days 
—A battered egg cup and a boat with feet— 
Have lost their glamour. They have not. The guide 
Fairly exudes his tale of godless hordes 
Sweeping like clockwork over Switzerland, 
Till what had been your very blood ticks out 
Voluptuous homilies. Ah, how well one might, 
If it were less than a matter of life or death, 
Traffic in strong prescriptions, “live” and “die”! 
But couldn’t the point about the phoenix 
Be not agony or resurrection, rather 
A mortal lull that followed either, 
During which flames expired as they should, 
And dawn, discovering ashes not yet stirred, 
Buildings in rain, but set on rock, 
Beggar and sparrow entertaining one another, 
Showed me your face, for that moment neither 
Alive nor dead, but turned in sleep 
Away from whatever waited to be endured?

(James Merrill, “About the Phoenix” from Collected Poems. Copyright © 2001 by James Merrill.) 

Phoenix


by Carmen Colombo


Out of my ashes
will rise a new phoenix. 

A soaring being
returning from death
proving once again
that life is eternal. 

I live forever
because the spirit
never dies. 

I will return
in another body
in another time,
but it is me. 

The me who is me now
will always be. 

As long as I live,
I learn.
And I live
F o r e v e r 


© Carmen Colombo1996
From www.wowzone.com

The Rising

 by George Darley

O Blest unfabled Incense Tree,
That burns in glorious Araby,
With red scent chalicing the air,
Till earth-life grow Elysian there!

Half buried to her flaming breast
In this bright tree, she makes her nest,
Hundred sunn'd Phoenix! When she must
Crumble at length to hoary dust!

Her gorgous death-bed! Her rich pyre
Burnt up with aromatic fire!
Her urn, sight high from spoiler men!
Her birthplace when self-born again!

The mountainless green wilds among,
Here ends she her unechoing song!
With amber tears and oderous sighs
Mourn'd by the desert where she dies!

Laid like the young fawn mossily
In sun-green vales of Araby,
I woke hard by the Phoenix tree
That with shadeless boughs flamed over me,


And upward call'd for a dumb cry
With moonbread orbs of wonder I
Beheld the immortal Bird on high
Glassing the great Sun in her eye.

Stedfast she gazed upon his fire,
Still her destroyer and her sire!
As if to his her soul of flame
Had flown already whence it came;

Like those that sit and glare so still,
Intense with their death struggle, till
We touch, and curdle at their chill!
But breathing yet while she doth burn
The deathless Daughter of the Sun!

Slowly to crimson embers turn
The beauties of the brightsome one.
O'er the broad nest her silver wings
Shook down their wasteful glitterings;

Her brinded neck high arch'd in air
Like a small rainbow faded there;
But brighter glow'd her plumy crown
Mouldering to golden ashes down;

With fume of sweet woods, to the skies,
Pure asa Saint's adoring sighs,
Warm as a prayer in Paradise,
Her life-breath rose in sacrifice!

The while with shrill triumphant tone
Sounding aloud, aloft, alone,
Ceaseless her joyful deathwail she
Sang to departing Araby! 



Do you Dream of the Phoenix ?

In Greek mythology, the Phoenix was a bird with great beauty, splendor and longevity. The legend tells us that the Phoenix lived for five hundred years and then retreated to make a nest where she would die. She made a nest of aromatic twigs that would burn from the heat of its own body. The Phoenix is said to rise from its own ashes.

It comes alive though the transforming power of fire and it lives again in full splendor. In the Middle Ages, the Phoenix was often used as a symbol for Christ, as he resurrected.

This legendary bird is an archetypal dream symbol that brings us positive and powerful images of rebirth. If you dream of the Phoenix, it is most likely that you are receiving message from the unconscious that are telling you that new life and new beginnings are always possible. This bird is a reminder that we have internal powers of regeneration and that we have the power to change things for the better.

As you are interpreting this dream, try to visualize a great bird rising up from fire and ash. It is a powerful image, whether produced by a dream or visualization.
"Our world desperately needs rebirth. Our mythic challenges are to find the "phoenix" within us, and then identify the gifts we each must engage; creative energies to help reintegrate and recreate the world around us in a way that serves everyone."


Wendy Ellertson 


Rise of the Phoenix Within by ~SocratesJedi on deviantART

The Phoenix Bird

by Hans Christian Andersen

In the Garden of Paradise,
beneath the Tree of Knowledge,
bloomed a rose bush.
Here, in the first rose, a bird was born.
His flight was like the flashing of light,
his plumage was beauteous,
and his song ravishing.

But when Eve plucked the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil,
when she and Adam were driven from Paradise,
there fell from the flaming sword of the cherub
a spark into the nest of the bird,
which blazed up forthwith.
The bird perished in the flames;
but from the red egg in the nest there fluttered aloft a new one
the one solitary Phoenix bird.
The fable tells that he dwells in Arabia,
and that every hundred years, he burns himself to death in his nest;

But each time a new Phoenix,
the only one in the world,
rises up from the red egg.
The bird flutters round us,
swift as light,
beauteous in color,
charming in song.

When a mother sits by her infant's cradle,
he stands on the pillow,
and, with his wings,
forms a glory around the infant's head.
He flies through the chamber of content,
and brings sunshine into it,
and the violets on the humble table smell doubly sweet.

But the Phoenix is not the bird of Arabia alone.
He wings his way in the glimmer of the Northern Lights
over the plains of Lapland,
and hops among the yellow flowers
in the short Greenland summer.

Beneath the copper mountains of Fablun,
and England's coal mines, he flies,
in the shape of a dusty moth,
over the hymnbook that rests on the knees of the pious miner.
On a lotus leaf he floats
down the sacred waters of the Ganges,
and the eye of the Hindu maid gleams bright when she beholds him.

The Phoenix bird, dost thou not know him?

The Bird of Paradise,

the holy swan of song!

On the car of Thespis he sat in the guise of a chattering raven,
and flapped his black wings,
smeared with the lees of wine;
over the sounding harp of Iceland
swept the swan's red beak;
on Shakespeare's shoulder he sat
in the guise of Odin's raven,
and whispered in the poet's ear
“Immortality!”
and at the minstrels' feast he fluttered through the halls of the Wartburg.

The Phoenix bird, dost thou not know him?
He sang to thee the Marseillaise,
and thou kissedst the pen that fell from his wing;
he came in the radiance of Paradise,
and perchance
thou didst turn away from him,
towards the sparrow who sat
with tinsel on his wings.

The Bird of Paradise,
renewed each century
born in flame,
ending in flame!
Thy picture,
in a golden frame,
hangs in the halls of the rich,
but thou thyself often fliest around,
lonely and disregarded,
a myth--
“The Phoenix of Arabia."

In Paradise,
when thou wert born in the first rose,
beneath the Tree of Knowledge,
thou receivedst a kiss,
and thy right name was given thee
--thy name,
Poetry.

 

 

The Spirit of the Phoenix

by Rebecca Wiles


Beautiful, glorious and sacrificing self for renewal

you build a pyre and set yourself ablaze.

For the sake of  self;

Red bird of  fire

You come forth through your ashes

A new bird shedding the old self;

Which no longer is needful.

You embrace your new strength and fly

To the heights of the sky,

To the city of the sun, and

give the ashes unto the alter of the sun god;

For your immortality.

Embrace yourself for you are a child of the sun,

And will live eternal;

Through birth, death, and renewal!

The spirit never dies!

Fly with the Phoenix

by Jennifer Psallidas

Wings of Bondage
Set me free
Sail over wet lands

Sweet teary Sun,
So bravely shining...
How does the lustful observer gain passage?
By rocket?
Some mystical vessel, set sail on the stars?
Where is the portal?

Fluted engines drive me on
My path is still unclear
I've travelled infinite miles
Over thousands and thousands of years.  

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Regeneration

Ink burns as I scribe this synopsis
For those who know heartbreak well
Dry eyes run with rage from the outside in
Something unknown to man
Yet familiar to the mind’s eye
Witnessing murders of the soul
Unrelenting and treacherous
Deafening screams of rage from within
Take precedent over raw emotion
Scaling heights unknown
Heights unreachable yet felt deep inside
Amicable fears, tears, and sadness dance beautifully
Onto the stage for all to acknowledge 
Slowly transforming into a swell of bursting flames
Only to die down and become ashes
Rising after moments of realization, anew.
Embracing the Phoenix within you.