Excerpt from The Dream Spa (Lucid Dreams) a long poem by EM Schorb


                                                           THE DREAM SPA

Lucid Dreams

I

The Association for the Study of Lucid Dreams 
summoned me to the Hotel Paradiso
to participate in a study in which I was to sleep 
and be awakened while I was dreaming
and was to maintain my dream 
and then to convert it
into whatever dream I wished it to become.

Lucid dreams are more vivid than common dreams. 
Inscape is energized, so that the world of the dream
is like that of Hopkins or Van Gogh,
pulsating, dynamic, vital.
Such imagery is said to be
the manifestation of cosmic holograms, 
and if I can convert them,
I can convert my life, like a wizard, 
turn it into what I want it to be,
or wished it were or had become, 
bring time back
with what and whom I loved, set a new 
course for myself, and embark.

II

I saw white gulls arise, upon arrival,
from the emerald maze in the huge garden 
surrounding the Hotel Paradiso. White gulls. 
Don’t they always arrive with a ship, 
following for her flotsam and jetsam?
And that night I dreamed I saw an instant, 
which was a dewdrop in my dream,
yes, a dewdrop and a stellar instant,
like that of the wild gulls, pulling 
the air with their wide wings,
an image, a vision of heavenly flight— 
an ascent, a transcendence—
a nano-second and a shimmering drop, 
or, shifting, a shimmering shield, 
hovering in space, and what looked like 
a moonbeam crossed the dark,
the silver dark of a swirling dust mote, 
a hazed, illumined, impossible dark,
fingered, like a laser, touched the instant, 
the drop, the Lilliputian planet,
with the most tender touch imaginable, 
angling this way and that, so that
with each angle an entire eternal history was 
displayed,
                 with all of the mass and multiplicity of life.

It seemed in my dream that there was no death, 
but a cottage-coziness everywhere, and of us 
and of the mountains and the waters, seemed 
that all these are projections of personality, 
(what I see I see because I am I)
spiritual manifestations, tilts at the dewdrop, 
incarnations and aspects of the All-in-all,
the anomalon itself, yes, and even that sheen,
that spark, on the oriflamme of time; seemed 
that we are the one hologram of life,
and that the family portrait
is the portrait of all who ever lived,
with mountains and waters and creatures 
wild and domesticated; seemed that
the holographic plate is angled
for this simulacrum, this three-dimensional portrait 
of a universe-apparent, which portrait
is not a memento mori but a glory
in a turning in time, a journey around a star.

My dream suggested that behind my waking back 
a deeper reality existed;
not the reality I saw before me, 
amazing pattern that it is,
a life-long complicated quilt, 
tangible, deep in its seams,
full in its bosomy pads; but another,
finer, more heavenly, fabric, a cloth-of-gold, 
glorious, gorgeous, radiant beyond imagination 
with a light unknown here, waves
in an intensity beyond experience, 
yet that do no damage to the eye, 
light that seems to love the eye— 
and that is the Word, I thought, 
with new insight: Love—which is 
expressed in its star-stuff, its human
potential, but never for good and all,
for there is more, we feel certain, we who 
are the stars singing, the vibratory expression 
of matter, tuning fork to tuning fork,
the template of interference-patterns making 
concentric intersecting rings until
with perfect pitch achieved
the magical-appearing universe
leaps into view—until the great music 
is made tangible and a table and chairs 
and a world and a universe, full of stars 
to look at, from a cottage
in an enchanted wood, 
where I sit, appear.

When, like a man with warlock vision, 
I watch the wilted wonders of my past 
parade in phalanx, I dream
that I can change my present state 
by intervening there,
where those wonders are and now parade, 
multiplicities of self, time-separated,
rude and naked strutting fools, 
but now, with a maturing vision, 
refreshed with vivid hope,
their formation ordered, 
their banners held high,
becoming what they might have been,
myself in time where time must be to make a memory, 
and invested with new direction,
can have them at command fall out 
or turn about or right or left,
know they are free in paradox,
not locked forever there, in constant error— 
yet go on, the same, as if my will
required my life—perhaps
some missing faith, perhaps some expiation.
Again perhaps the wonders are mirage 
and I was born this very instant,
tilted to a history and told a fate.

These reality fields are open for inspection, 
like model homes, and, in an augenblick, 
we are visiting an infinity of them.
They are where you are,
you need not go to see them:
no agent is necessary. Intersecting 
concentric rings are vibrating 
everything into view. The reality fields 
present glories and horrors to behold: 
they are moral reflections, purifying
the spirit, cleansing the dewdrop, 
keeping it clear and clean, all 
that I love borne with me 
through time and back out of it,
the lovelight never out, always tilting, 
becoming a new vision!

III

But a Bodhisattva,
or even a Beverly Hills guru, 
might say, might well say, did say: 
“Dead flesh is mad with flies.
The world is mad with lies!”

Memory, or lucid dream?
This hologram-like universe
seems solid, appears to have parts, can be 
taken apart—(I, too, am like a child and 
love a stack of gears)—so we take it apart, 
emotionally, mechanically, mathematically, 
take it apart as children will a watch,
begin to conceive of it as a watch, as Voltaire
did (and generously gave it a Watchmaker),
and become convinced that it is a kind of watch. 
We lift out structures, sequences, relationships, 
and rearrange them, and they become to us 
what we have come to believe they are— 
ballbearings unto infinity.

Answers generate questions in the mechanical sphere: 
the universe expands, more complicates itself.
We are made to ask and so increase
dimension, to multiply dimensions, to make the 
picture greater, more inclusive of the non-existent, 
to take back the ghosts and reinvest them,
to live again in the mirage, to beat the golden soul 
so fine it floats and flutters like a translucent gauze.
The impulsion to think is part of the expansion itself, 
and we must think like messenger-angels,
in a completeness of service, or we confuse ourselves 
and take the wrong turn, and miss the point—
shall we say the dewdrop—at which 
courage and intelligence and praise
 meet, and await us.

Biography


Author Self-Portrait

E. M. Schorb attended New York University, where he fell in with a group of actors and became a professional actor. During this time, he attended several top-ranking drama schools, which led to industrial films and eventually into sales and business. He has remained in business on and off ever since, but started writing poetry when he was a teenager and has never stopped. His collection, Time and Fevers, was a 2007 recipient of an Eric Hoffer Award for Excellence in Independent Publishing and also won the “Writer’s Digest” Award for Self-Published Books in Poetry. An earlier collection, Murderer’s Day, was awarded the Verna Emery Poetry Prize and published by Purdue University Press. Other collections include Reflections in a Doubtful I, The Ideologues, The Journey, Manhattan Spleen: Prose Poems, 50 Poems, and The Poor Boy and Other Poems.

Schorb’s work has appeared widely in such journals as The Yale Review, The Southern Review, The Virginia Quarterly Review, The Chicago Review, The Sewanee Review, The American Scholar, and The Hudson Review.

At the Frankfurt Book Fair in 2000, his novel, Paradise Square, was the winner of the Grand Prize for fiction from the International eBook Award Foundation, and later, A Portable Chaos won the Eric Hoffer Award for Fiction in 2004.

Schorb has received fellowships from the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center and the North Carolina Arts Council; grants from the Ludwig Vogelstein Foundation, the Carnegie Fund, Robert Rauschenberg & Change, Inc. (for drawings), and The Dramatists Guild, among others. He is a member of the Academy of American Poets, and the Poetry Society of America.

PRIZE-WINNING BOOKS
BY E.M. SCHORB
Books available at Amazon.com
_______________________________________

Dates and Dreams, Writer’s Digest International Self-
Published Book Award for Poetry, First Prize

Paradise Square, International eBook Award
Foundation, Grand Prize, Fiction, Frankfurt Book Fair

A Portable Chaos, The Eric Hoffer Award for Fiction,
First Prize

Murderer’s Day, Verna Emery Poetry Prize, Purdue
University Press

Time and Fevers, The Eric Hoffer Award for Poetry
and Writer’s Digest International Self-Published Book
Award for Poetry, each First Prize
 
visit www.emschorb.com.

 

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Phoenix & Intertwined. Poems by Emma Grey Rose

PHOENIX (A BIRD)

The pool at the house in / Phoenix / that house marked the end / of it / all / white desert / white /
flowers / the end of it / all / the sun did shine in / Phoenix / desert red / white / flowers / at the /
house / pool / marked the end of / all / the sun did / shine / end / the sun is / only in / Phoenix

INTERTWINED

I. A better person / II. There is a beach / III. St. John’s Wort / IV. Portland / V. Distract yourself /
VI. There is an ocean / VII. He hasn’t called / VIII. If you stare at the sun / IX. Just one bird / X.
Long enough at the sun / XI. One bird / XII. If you stare

 

 

Bio: Emma Grey Rose is a writer based in San Diego, CA. Her poetry has been published in deLuge Literary and Arts Journal, Pinky Thinker Press, Prairie Home Magazine, Bear Paw Arts Journal, Ranger Magazine, Panorama Journal, and elsewhere.

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Battle for Music. A Poem by Linda Imbler

Battle for Music


Reaching out to those from the past,

old frostbitten treble held fast,

in the unsettling absence of the old ruling class.

Blatant slights composing discourteous tone,

the tempo of time stolen 

and loose ends kept unkempt,

defining an obscure drone as nearly all we can hear.


Reverse ourselves,

soothe the interruption,

fill the secret box with choruses reprised,

replace removed harmonic constraints,

tunefulness no longer forbidden.


Preaching of the hymns  

and cardinal virtues renewed.

Abiding affection of clefs and ledger lines

meant to transform all as consonance,

putting forward what’s most dear to one’s heart,

and seat it with a staff,

enthroned in obvious audio triumph

Linda Imbler is an internationally published poet, an avid reader, classical guitar player, and a practitioner of both Yoga and Tai Chi. In, addition, she helps her husband, a Luthier, build acoustic guitars. She lives in Wichita, Kansas, U.S.A. where she enjoys her 200-gallon saltwater reef tank wherein resides her 24 year old yellow tang. Linda’s poetry collections include eight published paperbacks: Big Questions, Little Sleep First Edition, Big Questions, Little Sleep Second Edition; Lost and Found; Red Is The Sunrise; Bus Lights; Travel Sight; Spica’s Frequency; Doubt and Truth; and A Mad Dance. Soma Publishing has published her four e-book collections, The Sea’s Secret Song; Pairings, a hybrid of short fiction and poetry; That Fifth Element; and Per Quindecim. Examples of Linda’s poetry and a listing of publications can be found at lindaspoetryblog.blogspot.com. Linda has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and six Best Of The Nets.

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