UnMythed (selections)
Clytie
I can see you sitting there
looking up to your love
watching his every move
through the sky
like the girl who waited
every day at the corner
so to follow him to school
I knew his timetable
where he sat for lunch
and which afterschools he had practice
gradually your life changes
from human to plant
till you are finally immobilized
by your adulation
and unrequited love
if only you’d known
he wasn’t a god at all
but just some bunch of hot air
•
Clytie was a young woman in love with the Sun god. She would sit outside all day and watch him. Eventually she turned into a sunflower.
***
Amphion
perhaps you’re right about my beard—
it’s funny, I guess facial hair
well, hair of almost any kind
is a measure of masculinity
and academics and artists
have always felt a little like eunuchs
(real men use their bodies)
it’s an interesting insight
(and surprising from you)
but it falls a little short—
what I wonder is this:
do I have a beard
to look more like a man
or less like a woman?
•
Amphion was scorned by his brother, Zethus (a man who had great physical prowess), because he dedicated his life to art rather than to athletics.
***
Galatea
you don’t know me by name,
though you’ve heard of my husband, of course—Pygmalion.
the myth ends with our marriage.
then the real story begins.
(no, the real story begins a year later,
with our divorce.)
it shouldn’t surprise you—
I mean, look at the courtship:
it really didn’t involve me:
he spent months romancing his own private image
of the perfect woman,
not me.
(that happens a lot.)
then, as you know, he visited Venus,
she was impressed with his passion,
and made his sculpture
(his archetype of the life-sized inflatable doll)
come alive:
he proposed immediately,
and, I accepted.
(why, you might wonder.
well, it’s not uncommon for a disproportionate attachment
to develop toward the agent of,
no, the first encounter after,
one’s sexual awakening.
in my case, since the awakening included
my entire physicality,
I think my initial infatuation, and hence, consent
is understandable.)
however, over the next little while,
I found out what everyone knew:
that he had spent years creating
this beautiful statue,
that when it was done he started dressing it,
talking to it, bringing it gifts.
that he caressed it, kissed it—
(I also found out what few people knew:
that he had left a hollow space in the right spot,
and lined it with moss
—he was fucking it too.)
so let’s face it, the man has problems:
womb envy
delusions of grandeur
displaced narcissism
misogyny
stone fetishism
inability to cope with reality
so when he brought home this huge block of marble one day
I left.
•
Pygmalion was a sculptor who detested ‘the faults beyond measure which nature had given to women’ and therefore resolved never to marry. In spite of, or because of, his attitude, he sculpted a statue of ‘the perfect woman’. He grew to love it and began to kiss and caress it, dress it, bring it gifts, and put it to bed at night. Impressed with the strength of his love, Venus made the beautiful statue come alive; he named it Galatea.
***
Dido
Founder and Ruler of Carthage,
First at the bar, and Chair of the Law Association
President of the Business Alliance
Premier of the Year eight years running
Seventeen times on the cover of Newsweek
Lifetime member of Rotary and Big Sisters
(too bad what’s-his-name came into your life)
•
Dido was the founder and ruler of Carthage. Aeneas got shipwrecked on her land, and they became lovers. Eventually Aeneas left to found his own city. Dido then committed suicide.
***
(free downloads of complete collection at chriswind.net)