The Boundaries of Ancient Salih
By Ibtisam Abujad
“Command-like,” the tented woman knows its deception
When the seas cease to creek, it kidnaps them instead
The floods stop carrying the camels that breach
The boundaries of the ancient Salih
who prevented the young from perishing under the salted typhoon
I heard the stories, but took no shelter under the olive trees
No, I lamented not a second beyond the blowing of the horn
I fear not that green poison which boils the carcasses of the desert ships
“Command-like” they call it in nomadic tongue
Of the melting sun its soil is potted
Its leaves crimson the cheeks of young girls at the world’s fold
Its white sap flows, petrifying the arteries of fertile valleys
“Life-like,” it whispered, lulling me into a smaller death
A drink from the blue waters reddens your dehydrated lips, whitens your blackened eyes
Meld into its sapphire waters,
Enter the scent of its ivory incense
Rinse your likeness with its demystifying solution
Insert yourself into its baptismal pools, listen not to the sand dweller
Can she help but perish, blinded by the shards from which she was forged
Atrophied by the toxic milk of the she camel
She has been tranced by the mirages of the salmon queen
who knows only the past, who occupies the stony cavern
She breeds allusions, giving birth to muddled characters
who arrange heresy upon hanging tablets
and plot burials beneath the virginal quick sands
You must escape into the majesty of the purple mountains
Cross into the heart of the shining sees, it says
Confirm thy soul in self-control away from the sways of desert swells
Let the amber waves mend thine every flaw
At once, the winds shed their grace, beckoning me into their liberty
Away from the milky streams, and into the wilderness,
Onto a mare, carving into the sands a maelstrom as it gallops,
“Prince-like”.
Ibtisam Abujad is an instructor and doctoral student at Marquette University in Milwaukee, WI.