Magnum Opus
My Love,
In my work, we deal in abstracts. This you know. We trade our wealth for wisdom, our power for paradoxes, our sex for secrets, but our knowledge for nothing. We hold what secret wisdom of the past we can muster close to our hearts in hopes that one day we will acheive that which we desire most. Some of the craft seek the grandiose exchange of lead for gold. Some wish to rid themselves of the basest materials in their being and perfect themselves unto the sublime. What do I seek?
I seek the grand work of the universe, the Magnum Opus. I seek the perfect union of opposite forces. I seek a union beyond all those before save that of Venus and mercury. I seek a peaceful rival to mete my impetuous nature, a calm for my storm, a ceasefire in the endless war within my mind. I do not seek wealth or power. I seek only you, my other half.
We were born naked in our rawest forms, and we have seen maturity unto the perfection of our opposite natures: I the Red King, and you my White Queen. It is time now that we experience the uniting of rubedo, to let it wash over us like a wave of ecstacy guiding us to celestial strands and pulling us back into the undertow of new unknown pleasures.
Let me enter you and show you the motion of a new tide, crashing onto each of your shores and pulling you off the land and into my control. May I forget the nature of lead and gold and make the locks of your hair the only gold that satisfies me. May I forget about the perfection of self and look only to you, my goddess and the only true perfection I have witnessed on the rock we call home. May I forget about power and long only to serve you. Let me deny my abstracts and cleave unto you, the only thing I know to be truly real. May we be united in glorious consumation of fate: worlds colliding hard one into the other, open cave mouths knowing one another on the beds of rivers, two young birds learning each the other's tune, and two young lovers shouting each the other's name to the rhythm of their hearts pounding in time. Let my soul reach out unto yours and wrap it in loving embrace while my body pulls yours into the passion of the moment.
Let me write this letter, not upon a page, nor with a pen; but let me breathe the words upon your skin, write them as far inside you as I am able to reach. Let me make your body my manuscript and write on every page. Write on each of mine, and let us be one. Let us know the release of true union, my grand work, my Magnum Opus.
With all that is within me,
Red King
It Feels Like Her
Have you ever wondered if you could drown without stepping into the ocean?
Without even taking the first drink?
To be broken
Like a flimsy token
At the arcade you played at as a child, shattered by emotion?
Ever wondered what it would feel like for some force to enter your lungs,
Fill each air passage,
Climbing up like the rungs of a ladder,
To have some unknown matter
Clatter up your spine,
Then rewind and blast the breath from you like a gun,
But have nothing around you that could cause such a sensation?
No?
Neither had I.
It just happened.
I saw her first when I was fifteen.
The sheen of her hair
And the gleam of her stare
Made me feel
Like she
Was a queen
Age fifteen.
I talked to her, and I was scared to death.
With each breath,
I felt like I came a little closer to death –
And a little closer to life.
I
Felt like I was above the clouds,
But the air
Is thin up there.
Something crept into my lungs, I swear.
This was the first time I felt it,
And kept me from breathing from the time she said my name
Until she waved goodbye that day.
I did not know what it was,
But I thought they called it “love”.
When I was seventeen,
She was mine.
She was my Athene,
And my Aphrodite.
She was my evening star,
And my sun bright shining.
She looked at me,
And her eyes were shining.
With her fingers, she traced the lines of my lips.
With my fingers, I traced the curves of her hips.
Like a script written by the greats,
I said how much I loved her.
She told me that she loved me, too.
I felt it again.
It started in my gut
And pulled itself up
Into my lungs, but
It really stopped my breathing
When she began leaning in to kiss me.
The lips she had traced
Embraced the lips I had dreamed of so oft.
They laced so perfectly together
As they held their place,
Racing one against the other
To go farther,
As far as they could.
I did not know what it was
But I thought they called it “passion”.
When I was twenty-one,
She was my moon and sun,
Undone before me
On the night we became one.
Dressed in white,
She said, “I do.”
I did believe she was my life,
My all and all my truth.
We held each other until the morning light,
Without the fright
That the night lends those who do not have someone to love.
I knew her name as I had never known before,
The door was closed,
And we gave each other more
Than we had ever given before.
She touched to my chest,
And with it, she carried the feeling.
It went reeling through my body
As each breath was sucked from me.
With each of those shallowing breaths,
I felt like I was coming a little closer to death,
But with each breath I felt her breathe,
I thought I was a little closer to life.
A life ever better with my wife.
I did not know what it was
But I thought they called it “happiness”.
I saw her for the last time when I was twenty-two.
I never knew
Why she flew from our home.
Like a bird that could not be kept in one place,
She needed to feel the wind beneath her wings.
She needed things
I could not give her.
I gave her silver and gold,
A hand to hold,
And a shoulder to cry on.
She needed to try on other faces,
Other places,
Other arms she could wear around her like bracelets and necklaces.
When I saw her this last time,
She had a new pair of arms.
They held her like I once held her.
She said she no longer loved me,
She drew me back down from above the clouds
With the help of those arms,
And that did me more harm
Than she will ever know.
The blow she dealt knocked the air out of my lungs,
And I felt it again.
Something crawled into those lungs
And chased out the breath.
Nothing was left when it had left.
She was gone
Along with all my will to live.
That will that she had given me
She took away.
My breath never returned after that.
I did not know what it was inside me,
But they told me it was called “anxiety”, “depression”, “pain”,
And a million other things
That could not bring her back.
Have you ever wondered if you could drown without stepping into the ocean?
Without even taking the first drink?
To be broken
Like a flimsy token
At the arcade you played at as a child, shattered by emotion?
Ever wondered what it would feel like for some force to enter your lungs,
Fill each air passage,
Climbing up like the rungs of a ladder,
To have some unknown matter
Clatter up your spine,
Then rewind and blast the breath from you like a gun,
But have nothing around you that could cause such a sensation?
No?
Neither did I,
But now I know.
It feels like her.