Salmonson has written or edited more than twenty books of fantasy and the supernatural including the anthology Amazons!, which won the World Fantasy Award in 1980. She is also a prolific poet.
These two short poems, from Weird Tales and Haunts respectively, are imbued with longing and sensuous images of death.
—E.D.
Stricken by favors of a darkened place
Falling through limbo
upon fractured wings
Greeted in deserts by scorpion stings
Glaring at Love without eyes in its face.
Sifting through dust
that was once a great God
Laughing in echoes
that fade without trace
Twined in our graveclothes
of gossamer lace
Peering in chasms
where light is outlawed.
Tears fall like knives into the fearful pit,
Spirits glint like moonbows in jet cascade
Sought by Fisher Death
for his waiting spit.
Fear not. Even this indignity will fade.
Trampled beneath our impossible dreams,
Vanished in rips in reality’s seams.
“I and this Love are one, and I am Death.”
Death came walking in my garden
of pale white lilies and blood-red roses.
A stone angel crumbles in her pool,
her broken lips spouting silent prayers.
Nestlings cease their hungry song,
moveless midst the branches.
I alone rushed to Death’s embrace,
my heart quickened with desire—
“Who fears me not,” said Death
“comes to me no sooner,”
and coldly I was cast aside.
Death came walking in my house
where shadows shroud the rooms;
grief resounds; sadness looms because
a child from me was taken.
“Take me as well; take me!”
was my prayer,
yet Death spumed me anew.
Years have passed;
the world has passed me by;
and I lay gasping on a lonesome bed.
“Turn from me a while,” I begged
of the skeletal presence,
who proclaimed,
“The sad, the elderly, the maimed,
or the quick and strong —
to me, all are the same.”
Then with Death I went walking
and I looked behind to see my life
with so much left undone.
“No,” I whispered. “No,” and “No.”
But Death said softly, “Yes. ”