Saturday, 6 October 2018

Charm Against Insomnia

Albrecht Durer




Charm Against Insomnia

Little mouse, little
gray hunger
that nibbles
the night to a bony
toothpick,
little possibility
of impossible things,
glimmer of nothing
like hope,
little shadow
that dreams,
small genius of bad teeth
and ice,
angel of wire,
of colic, of palsy-
thin kittens,
contain like a penny
or aspirin,
your acids and bitters;
cart off your coattails
those vulture-rich
contrails, your spidery
roses or doses
of splinters.
Bugger and sod off,
blister and suffer,
wither, fester lackluster,
besnuff, beshrivel,
becroak, benight,
belabor, bellbind, be gone!

Hailey Leithauser
from "Swoop"
 




Lack of sleep has been a topic around here lately. Leithauser’s image of insomnia as a little mouse that nibbles and nips away at our sleep is about as accurate as you can get. The idea that there might be a charm we could say to dispel insomnia is wonderful. L. manages to capture both the exasperation of not being able to sleep and the magic of words. I don’t know of any other poet who plays with words quite like she does – beshrivel?! It’s wonderful. This is a poem to be spoken out loud, to be savoured for sound. Possibly to be repeated in the dark, while staring at a ceiling and trying to get back to sleep.




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