Iconographies
At first they looked to be in trouble:
the car stopped alongside the road,
a variety of drivers or passengers
outside holding their phones up to the sun
descending behind the mountains.
I respect their urge to hold onto
that beauty but couldn’t stop
for it myself, took as much
of it in until the trees near the road
obscured it—at home and the last draw
of whiskey when the power’s out
all over town and I can’t go
out for more—in the dark
I am drawn to the multitudinous
variations of a theme that’s obsessed me
for years: the archangel Gabriel’s visitation
to Mary to announce her miraculous
conception of God made man.
The first I saw was Leonardo’s:
both Gabriel and Mary eaten up
by an immaculate suffusion
of robes, Byzantine stars
bursting atop their heads.
Her right hand pressing
the pages of a book
on an intricate marble table,
Mary moves back the arched
fingers of her left hand
to receive the angel’s
blessing—then a frolicking reel
of the motif and its transformations
—in one, the ghostly outline
of Gabriel floats down to wordless
Mary, arms crossed in an X
over her chest in Gustave Doré’s
engraving, a slighter X in Carlo
Crivelli’s The Annunciation
with St. Emidius but Mary
is still attending to her book,
an ultralight beam impregnating
her from heaven. Mathias Stom
has adorned Mary in a sky blue
robe and red dress by candlelight
looking up from her book,
the angel on the right, the angel
on the left, the angel with white
wings, the angel with gold wings,
the angel with birdlike wings
with black, orange, and yellow
feathers. Whatever ecstatic
wings bore the angel to her,
whatever simple dwelling
or temple or piazza or enclosed
garden of Madonna Lilies
(the angel is often holding
them but not this time)
that Mary finds herself within,
this is when the divine over-
shadows us. Do we look aside,
then, in a gesture of humility,
stop startled at this late hour
or become eager to return
to the more familiar
fancy in our book?
One would hope to be
as Mary in Lorenzo
Lotto’s Recanati Annunciation
—so taken aback we must
turn completely from
the heavenly interlocutor
and clap our hands
in prayer—but caught
by the painter in a moment
of pivoting away, kneeling,
palms facing out before
joining as the cat scurries
off and God watches
from a cloud in the window.
Stepping back to their cars,
what peculiar configuration
turned the passive to the creator?
What sun, what sky, what fields,
what mountains—how many
flowering lilies did they see
along the mountainside pass
before they pulled off
into the breakdown lane
and stopped to say, behold?
Reduced to the Numinous
I blew the dust from your name
I held a glass to your name
I brought a light to your name
I placed your name in fire
& it roared but did not burn away
I flashed the sign of your name
I traced whorls with your name
I pierced the mark of your name
I cast lots with your name
but could not tell first from last
I worried the earth with your name
I let the blood from your name
I sucked the salt from your name
I built an altar to your name
& placed a sacred font upon it
I could not abide that there was only your name
I held myself down in the waters of your name
I poured myself out in the abundance of your name
I lifted my head to ask are you here with me now
by saying your name again and again and again
Ben Pease is the author of the full-length poetry collection Chateau Wichman: A Blockbuster in Verse (Big Lucks Books), a poetry-infused Dungeons & Dragons adventure module called The Light of Mount Horrid (Ghost in the Forest Games), the hybrid illustrated edition Furniture in Space (factory hollow press), and a few chapbooks. His poems have recently appeared or are forthcoming in American Poetry Review, Poetry Northwest, jubilat, Biscuit Hill, and 7x7, among others. He is a co-founder of the Ruth Stone House, Communication Coordinator at Otter Creek Engineering, and book designer for various enterprises. He lives in Brandon, VT with his wife, Bianca Stone, and their daughter, Odette.