Passages

Sandra Tan

(Singapore)

The night, a thicket. The sailors lean their mast
Towards the flames that ring the mountain.
A leopard’s glowing spots, a celestial map,
A trail of cairns into the darkness.
Refusing all signs. The hills, alight, unconsumed,
Drunk on the sighs of the stones.
Once, a great beast was pierced through the heart
By a man on a winged horse. Its dying breath
Kindled the seams of mist hewn into
Rivers of rock. Rage, smelted,
Wields an edge past the mortal frame.
Orange sprites dance to a silent tune,
Flicker out of and into existence.
Waver like needles of rain.

 

Note
Mount Chimaera was the name of a place in ancient Lycia, and is thought to be located in Yanartaş in Turkey. “Yanartaş” is Turkish for “flaming stone”. Fires on the mountainside have been thought to be continuously burning for at least 2,500 years, fuelled by naturally-occurring gases (including methane). It has been theorised that the mountain was the source of the myth of the Chimera. As told in Homer’s Illiad, the Chimera was eventually killed by the hero Bellerophon, with the aid of Pegasus, who shot the monster down from a height.

Sandra Tan

is a

Guest Contributor for Panorama.

Sandra Tan is a writer from Singapore. Her poems have appeared in Panorama: The Journal of Travel, Place, and Nature, The Oxonian Review, Quarterly Literary Review Singapore, The Kindling, and Eastlit.

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