Sestina: Song of the Dream Catcher
Here in this room of growing old,
we gather around the pillowed chair
placed under the tarnished lamp
hiding the secretive spider
weaving the dream-catcher
to catch the flies of sleep.
And is it so important then to sleep,
to while away the hours until the night is old
allowing the ancient dream-catcher
to rock with rhythm of the weary chair,
the suspended spider
‘s web in the dusty lamp?
Reaching up to tug the lamp
chain, would we then swing to sleep
hearing the spider
singing cobwebbed songs of old,
rock rock rocking to the rhythm of the chair
under the pale dream-catcher?
Slumber if we must. Let the dream-catcher
send those fears to the canopied lamp.
Still the rocking of the chair.
Drift into the cavern of sleep
farther from thoughts we could grow old
watched over by a spider.
We dare not crush the mystical spider or dust away the dream-catcher, thus showering down those dreams of growing old, stored in the centre of the lamp,
chasing the wilfulness of sleep
from the padding of the chair
that knows not it is a chair
being rather the harbinger of the spider ,
who, when weaving is done, would sleep
in the heart of the dream-catcher,
hiding pain in the depths of the lamp
now known only to the old.
Do not dust the chair or clean the lamp.
Do not destroy the spider or dream-catcher,
‘Lest we grow old as we sleep.
Rebecah Hall
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