WORLD VOICES

SATYR'S WIFE
  BY RITA SIGNORELLI-PAPPAS


Contents

Home
Introduction

About the Author
Arachne
Beautiful Girl Café
Satyr's Wife
I Run into Count Ugolino
Folktale
Riding with Keats
Petunias
Moths
Venice
Semele
Apollo and Daphne
Basket of Oranges
The Road to Sènanque
Mushrooms
Dreamlife of a Mime
Ariadne in Verona
Parmigianino Thinking
On the Appian Way
Pythia: The Process
Mind Clearing in a
    Chinese Landscape

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Pythia: The Process           
                  

First the slow ease of weightlessness,
then her lifted body woven
into a cold chrysalis of fern.

Next the spiced scent of burnt laurel,
then a secret smoke of barley and pine
ghosting from a cleft in stone.

Now again the ice gleam of wings—
the melting pull of translucent butterflies
moving her to a tripod,

now the bleating sacrificial goat,
then her own limbs trembling as
the freezing pin-pricks of Apollo's voice

sprinkled through her organs
and breathed her out of herself
into a dim beat of thrown pebbles--

into the pulse of words.
Again she bent over a bowl of clear water
as it whitened into foam--

the particles of time dissolved
into a thunder of before now after
rising from the temple floor.

Then the priest spoke and trance
released her, breath by breath.
Then her own music began.




Published in The Literary Review