NUN AND MATINS.A Poem by Terry CollettA NUN AND HER TROUBLED INTERIOR.The rosary slips between fingers, pushed by thumb, prayers said, saying, praying. The nun feels cramp in her thigh, ache of knee. Bell to ring, light through crack in shutters, seeps. Like that time in Paris. Young then, bells from some church, he saying, we must visit the Sacre Coeur. Did, too, later, their hands holding, thoughts of love. That thin sliver of light through cracks in that shutter. He beside her, body warm, hands folded between his thighs, prayer like. Pater Noster, thumb moves beads, skin on wood. And he said, Paris is built on the bones of the dead, he looking straight into her eyes, dark eyes, pools of smooth liquid passion. The bell rings, Matins, she thumbs away the last bead, prayers said, on flight to her God. Knees ache, thigh crampy, she rubs to ease. He rubbed like that, her thigh, his hands, warm and slowly. Rubs slowly now, she and her hand, to ease. Pain, what is it for? Questions, answers, always there. Coinage, pain, to pay back, debt for sins, hers, others, here, in Purgatory. She ceases to rub, puts rosary down, lets it hang from her belt as she walks from her cell(room) along passage, down stairs, not to rush, said Sister Hugh, not to rush. She holds up the hem so as not to rub. Into the cloister, early morning light just about to come over the high walls. Chill, touches, hands, fingers, bend, open, bend. He showed her this trick with a coin, his hand open, the coin there, then he closed and opened, and it had gone, vanished, had mouth open, and he laughed. Never did show how was done, have faith, he said laughing. The cloister, walls high, church tower, red bricks, flower garden around below the walls. Silence. She learnt that, not easy being a woman, tongue still, interior silence, also, Sister Josephine said, inner silence. Harder to keep, the inner voice hushed. She passes the statue of Our Lady, flowers, prayer papers, pieces, tucked in crannies, under flower, vases. Santa Maria audi nos. He was coming to her, took her in his arms and kissed her lips, that cold morning after the party, Paris, art, music, it was all there. She enters the church, puts fingers into stoup, blessed water, makes sigh of cross from head to breast to breast. Sunlight seeps through glass windows, stone flag floor, cold, shiny, smooth. His lips on hers, flesh on flesh, tongue touching tongue. Long ago, best forget, let it go. She sits in her choir stall, takes up breviary, thumps through pages. Prayer pieces of paper, many requests sent. This one's mother has cancer, deadly, her prayers requested for recovery. Not impossible, faith says so. But she doubts, always the doubt. She'll pray, ask, request, ask God, for supplicants request, but God knows best. He sees all. Knows all. Knows me, she thinks, better than I know myself. Cogito ergo sum, Descartes said, and he said it,too. He in his pyjamas, so sexy, uttering the Descartes, hands open. I think, there, I am, he said, I am,(naked) therefore, I think. He laughed. Other nuns enter, take their place in choir stalls, sound of sandals on wood, books being opened, prayers whispered. Bells ring, Mother Abbess, enters, all lower head. Where did he go after having sex with you? she never did know, not then, some things best not known. O Lord open my lips. Shut down my thoughts. She makes the sign of the cross. Finger, middle finger, from forehead to breast to breast. Smells, air, fresh, stale, bodies, old wood and stone, she standing, praying, all together, all alone. © 2013 Terry Collett |
StatsAuthorTerry CollettUnited KingdomAboutTerry Collett has been writing since 1971 and published on and off since 1972. He has written poems, plays, and short stories. He is married with eight children and eight grandchildren. on January 27t.. more..Writing
|