- Mother’s Day, 2003, Flying Westward, and: Jeanne d’Arc, Imprisoned, and: The Changeling
Mother’s Day, 2003, Flying Westward
An hour out of Gatwick, we’re cruising at however many feet—I can’t
remember numbers—but, outside, clouds colonize the air, one dissident [End Page 101]
shredded by our wing. The war is “won,” the casualties, well, they’re justified,
our president’s convinced. I could read about postmodern fashion in this
magazine, but it’s too hip. If I wanted deconstruction, I’d listen
to the news. Today, they interviewed the parents of some soldiers stationed
overseas, proud Americans, still sure we’re enlightening the Middle
East. My daughters, to my shame, support the occupation, too. Dawn
disappears behind the plane. I see nothing out there now but the jet-trail
of other travelers vandalizing the sky. I’d like to turn, go back, fly
again into Rome where pace flags brighten windowsills. But it’s too late.
I’ve had my holiday, the family expects its mother home, not running
around in European churches, praying God protect the world from us.
It’s not evening yet, though we have lost the day, but our approach, descending
through rain, looks dim, the West already settling, anticipating night. [End Page 102]
Jeanne d’Arc, Imprisoned
And they call me possessed—royals, clergy leaders of state circling and chanting die,
my comrades, sisters and brothers, stunned dumb to imagine me lashed to a pole. Do
they hope I will sprout horns or fly away? I have renounced the voices of the saints
and for that lie—a moment’s fear—do I suffer what they call reprieve. Now English,
now Latin, the message is always death when an earthly empire speaks. But I am
baffled, fatigued. Have I mistranslated? St Catherine still whispers war in my ear,
perhaps it is parable. Metaphor. Single girl in a world of politic
kings. It’s slippery in here, which label must I wear today? Heretic, herald
of wisdom, witch, woman who dares to wear men’s garments. Guards toss me dresses, then they
threaten rape. Who wouldn’t choose breeches, I am skirted with evil, I am under
surveillance, occupied. They’re at my door, hoping to catch a snatch of treasonous [End Page 103]
speech, though the official word is that I only talk to myself. I will say no
more than a prayer when they conjure up their terror, set a torch to my skin and press
in for a better view of the fire. I see the godly ones stirring my ashes,
measuring bone, adding a pinch of lime. And they call me touched, traitor to the Right.
With my halo of pain, my sanctified mind, I am the holiest thing they know.
The Changeling
Testimony of Johanna Kennedy Burke at the trial of Michael Cleary for the murder of his wife, Bridget Boland Cleary, 1895
Are you a witch, are you a fairy, / Or are you the wife of Michael Cleary?
–Schoolyard rhyme, County TipperaryPicture her now, no sheehoguey thing spirited from the mountain by fairies to cough and curse down her husband’s house.
But neither my cousin Bridget. One gold earring still in place, black stockings on her charred legs, the rest a burned sack
of meat and bones. I never liked her, I admit. Dress-proud. She made herself the word on every gossip’s tongue but [End Page 104]
even I could see that a chest cold does not mark a woman for murder unless that drunk Jack Dunne is called in,
and what did Michael expect from him, a fairy doctor, but “That is not Bridget Boland”? I think of her now,
the fevered face, her fear when she pulled me down to the pillow to whisper, “He’s making a changeling of me.” I
saw only tuberculosis, blood on her mouth, and if her husband was brutal, well, I saw only the bed
she had made and would have to lie in. Forgive me, I was asleep when he doused her with the paraffin, I should
have seen it would come to that, the fire was in his...