
In the belly of an old church
Nadine Ellsworth-Moran
No one threw me overboard—
but like Jonah I have to screw up my courage,
climb the rail myself, face what lies beneath,
beyond my knowing, where the ocean
door is heavy, emanating incense, musky
smoke and spice from an ancient current
where the dag gadol with its stone mouth
waits to gulp me down.
Inside the air smells blue,
the scent of stained glass
communing with anemic light
filtering through baleen plates
and rises from candles
that bow before their saints.
Even here remain the hints
of sweet almond paste, festal days,
song beneath words, communion bread—
these hookbaits of salvation cast
into my offenses and laments,
lures caught in the arched timber spine.
The surface, so far and sliverthin breathed
through coldsteeped lungs, I pull old wool
the widows wear tight around my shoulders,
inhale a heady lanolin, peat moss lost
between slick stone ribs, centuries
of damp, and lick the brine
from my lips before
I try to pray.
Image by Harry Rajchgot (2024)