Lady Macbeth on Sleep
- Share via
Each shudder takes the mattress by surprise,
though guilt’s hard pillow stares you in the face;
the curtains whisper their beguiling lies,
but sleep the soft eraser can’t erase.
The night pretends it has no word for me,
I who have walked the corridors in fear
of each new-murdered ghost’s philosophy,
of acts whose rumor echoes in my ear.
Who when he sleeps is threatened by the real?
The falling ladders seem to comprehend
the fall of states; the nightmare robbers steal
the dagger clenched within the sleeper’s hand.
Last night I watched three sisters disagree
on a dead island in the green lagoon;
like Daphne each became a laurel tree
and walked across the black waves streaked with moon.
*
From “Macbeth in Venice” by William Logan (Penguin: 76 pp., $17 paper)
More to Read
Sign up for The Wild
We’ll help you find the best places to hike, bike and run, as well as the perfect silent spots for meditation and yoga.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.