Briefing for a Descent Into Hell - Doris May Lessing [8]
Yes, I’ll hail them, of course, though now a new coldness in my heart tells me of a fear I didn’t have before. I had not thought once, not in all those cycles and circles and circuits, around and around, that they might simply not notice me, as a man might not notice a sleeping kitten or a blind puppy hidden under the fold of his smelly blanket. Why should they notice the speck of a raft on the wide sea? Yet there is nothing for it but to go on, oarless, rudderless, sleepless, exhausted. After all I know it would be a kindness to land on Nancy’s coast and tell her that her Charlie has met up at last with—what? Them, I suppose, though that is all I can tell her, not even how he felt as he became absorbed into the substance of that shining Thing. Will she sing her song to me on my raft, drifting past, will the women line up along the walls of their summer gardens and sing, and shall I then sing back how the time is past for love? And then on I’ll drift to George’s friend and shout to him how George has—what? And where? And then on and on and on, until I see again my Conchita waiting, dressed in the habit of a nun, where all my wandering and sailing has put her.
Man like a great tree
Resents storms.
Arms, knees, hands,
Too stiff for love,
As a tree resists wind.
But slowly wakes,
And in the dark wood
Wind parts the leaves
And the black beast crashes from the cave.
My love, when you say:
“Here was the storm,
Here was she,
Here the fabulous beast,”
Will you say too
How first we kissed with shut lips, afraid,
And touched our hands, afraid,
As if a bird slept between them?
Will you say:
“It was the small white bird that snared me”?
And so she sings, each time I pass, around and around, and on and on.
DOCTOR X: Well, how are you this afternoon?
PATIENT: Around and around and around …
DOCTOR X: I’d like you to know that I believe you could snap out of this any time you want.
PATIENT: Around and around and around …
DOCTOR X: Doctor Y is not here this weekend. I’m going to give you a new drug. We’ll see how that does.
PATIENT: In and out, out and in. In and out, out and in.
DOCTOR X: My name is Doctor X. What is your name?
PATIENT: Around