Read The Lightning Dreamer Online
Authors: Margarita Engle
Visions! The night is filled
with fierce spirits and gentle ones.
Invisible beings spin and moan.
Floor, ceiling, and walls
whisper, wail, and shout . . .
Phantoms beg me to transform
my strange dreams
into stories.
Words burst
and fly
past trees
in the garden.
I rise up out of a nightmare
and grasp a feather pen,
feeling winged.
Feather pens, flowing ink,
and weightless paper
all mean
nothing at all to me.
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So I give them away
to my sister, who claims
she feels trapped
and can free herself only
with words.
When we visit my grandfather
on his sugar plantation,
I see how luxurious
my mother's childhood
must have been,
surrounded by beautiful
emerald green sugar fields
harvested
by row after row
of sweating slaves.
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How can one place
be so lovely
and so sorrowful
all at the same time?
My grandfather speaks
of the various noblemen
he might select for me
next year, when I reach
the dreaded age
of fourteen.
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Twice, my mother defied her father
in order to marry for love, but now
she expects me to regain her place
in my grandfather's will
by marrying a stranger
in exchange
for gold.
On our last day in the countryside,
my grandfather gives me a cruel gift:
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a yellow songbird
flapping helplessly
inside a delicate
bamboo cage.
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The captive bird's
graceful wings
are useless.
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All it can do is flutter
and sing.
My pen is empty.
I cannot write.
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All I do is watch
my caged goldfinch
and listen to his brave
little song.
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I have discovered injustice,
but what good is a witness
who cannot testify?
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I am silent.
Useless.
My voice
has vanished.
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Will I ever learn how to sing
on paper?
My indoor world of walls
grows so quiet that I have to create
my own noise.
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I recite Heredia's poems of justice
out loud.
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Mamá calls me a land of extremes.
My stepfather covers his ears.
Do they imagine that I enjoy
swaying back and forth
between moods of flame
and ice?
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If only I could be calm, like my bird,
who waits all night for morning sun.
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If only I could be
someone else.
Opinions.
Ideas.
Possibilities.
So many!
How can I choose?
Between bursts
of lightning-swift energy,
I enjoy peaceful moments
when the whole world
seems to be a flowing river
of verse
and all I have to do is learn
how to swim.
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During those times,
I find it so easy to forget
that I'm just a girl who is expected
to live
without thoughts.
I speak my mind, and then
I have to apologize to Mamá
over and over, always the same
sincere apology. I really am sorry,
so sorry that I am not
the sort of daughter
my mother can love.
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When she catches me writing,
she calls me sinful,
loca
âcrazyâ
a manly girl, a madwoman,
monstrous . . .
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She warns me that no rich man
will ever fall in love with a girl
who loves books, but I don't care.
I will never marry a man
who thinks girls
should be
stupid.