Tag: woman in the well

  • Veritas: The Woman In The Well

    I recall the bucket of coopered staves to lower,

    splash and feeling the weight filling.  Soft rope,

    braided and frayed winding round a slicked-log

    spindle cranked by hand up through a squeaking

    pulley would bring the bucket of water up to us.

    I claimed first sip from the tarnished tin dipper

    made cold to my lips by the wells sweet water.

     •

    If I caught him in a good mood, Old-man Carter

    would sigh, lean his cane and lift me up to stare

    down into the cool, unquiet, enticing darkness;

    his private black hole protected by lid and shed.

    Tall, taciturn and humorless, I though, he told me,

    “A woman hides in the well and sings to me.”

    “You drink the water?” I asked. “I do.” he bragged.

    Even at five, I knew people told lies or as

    Mama called them: stories.  You’re telling me

    a story! she would allege puckering her brow.

    A thousand siren songs pulled me from the well;

    decades falling away before I knew her name;

    the woman beneath the water down the well

    who sings to sooth and protect her only child.

    A goddess, yet still, only a frail creature hiding

    from those that would disfigure, abuse, and

    malign her for the songs of truth she sings;

    holding Virtue, sweet child, tight to her, she

    watches for descending light, a face above,

    an ear attentive to voices other than its own.

    “You drink the water?” you ask. “I do.” I brag.