lunes, 24 de julio de 2017

THE THREE GLASS SHARDS

1.  The Window Shard

The Queen looked out the window and sighed--
she was waiting still for her lover to come by. 
He’d throw a pebble at the pane when he arrived.
She hoped to have a girl with his dark eyes.

When the King was traveling or with court matters occupied, 
they would sweet tryst in this high room all the while. 

She knew she was bearing the Huntsman’s child.
His hair was as black as a forest night, 
his knife at the hip, red with blood shiny as glass,
as he’d come to her in the white moonlight.

Now the window she used to sit by to await him is broken. 
A heavy tree branch shattered it in a violent snowstorm. 
One pointed shard lies on the floor of the boarded-up tower room--
no more a medium for reflections on his love, 
or daydreams of her child to be;
and unable to show the face she once yearned to see. 



2.    The Mirror Shard

When it told her Snow White was the fairest,
the Evil Queen had shattered the Mirror.

Now it lays on her chamber’s floor, 
silvers scattered and bent, 
whispering to itself in jagged fragments,
telling the truth to her vain ears no more.

Each sliver, thin-edged with her blood like a gilt-border, 
shines, as snow falls white as fine cambric to embroider
against the hard ebony sky of winter. 

She does not know that her Mirror
had been forged by and instilled
with the dwarves’ magic will.


3.    The Coffin Shard

The seven had thought Snow White dead, 
but she could still hear and see,
though make no motion.

 She thought she saw her mother in the glass overhead
—but was it only her own face’s reflection?

Her mother was smiling at her.
“You will live again and be happy,” she said.

And it came true: after the apple fell from her mouth, 
she woke and left with the prince to wed.

The coffin in the forest was abandoned to decay. 
But the king’s men came across it
while hunting there years later, one day. 

It had become covered with moss and with brambles overgrown; 
a home to crawling­­­­­ insects and woodland mice. 

Now the glass has been splintered by heavy snow.
It gleams split by moonlight, capped with white ice, 
and strewn like wild roses on the forest floor--
bed and prison for the Queen’s dreamed child no more. 

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