Copyright © 2010 by
William R. Mistele. All rights reserved.
Poor Donovan
It is like this: Often the songs of
gods and goddesses arise from our dreams and the lips of priests, poets, and
mystics. But this is not the case with Istiphul. She is not a goddess, but an
intelligence dwelling within nature, and she existed before the human race was
born. In fact, many magicians have met their fates at the hands of her beauty
and charms.
Take, for
example, poor Donovan, who possessed second sight and could spy into the
mysteries of fairy realms. He was a little too adventurous for his own good
with those eyes of his.
He once
walked the shores of Ireland, not far from Dublin. Donovan knew well the charms
and the cold call of the sea, for his father was a fisherman, though, oddly
enough, some say he had noble blood in his veins.
At night
Donovan could hear the songs in the stars, and they shone even brighter for him
than they did for van Gogh. He could see the inner essence of whatever he gazed
upon. The ocean waves and their spray continuously called for him to dance and
play in a place of pure delight.
Though
Donovan had no formal magical training, he did not need to use a familiar or a
conjured spirit to gain a woman. He could hold the image of a maiden’s face in
his mind’s eye for five hours. As he concentrated, the maiden would walk
fifteen miles to his house to spend the night with him even if she were a
virgin—such was his telepathic power of suggestion and the nature of his erotic
imagination.
One night
Donovan dreamed of Istiphul, who dwells under the sea. He saw her dancing
naked, and from that moment it was more than wonder and curiosity that
motivated him. He wanted to know her charms. He wanted to taste her beauty,
though his conscience informed him that he could neither stare her down, nor
bind her with his voice, nor hold her with his mind’s might.
One day,
agitated and unable to bear the torment of his desires any longer, Donovan sent
his mind into the sea. The power of his intuition was such that he could
already feel Istiphul’s touch. And so he was not surprised when an emerald path
of light lit up as he wandered in search of Istiphul beneath the waves.
Donovan went
directly to Istiphul’s palace. She greeted him at the gate and invited him in. For as “the sea refuses no river,” Istiphul refuses none who wish
to know the mysteries of love. Her charms, like the beauty of nature,
are for all to taste. Her embrace is for all to receive—her magic is like
sunlight, moonlight, starlight, dawn, and twilight. Who would conspire to bind
or confine beauty such as this? Who would blind our eyes and deny such wondrous
gifts because they do not fall within the boundaries of human morality?
What general
has ever refused to stock his arsenal with a weapon because it gave him an
unfair advantage over his enemy? What scientist has ever refused to probe a
secret of nature because some things are best left unknown? What poet has ever
said, “These poems I write should be locked away, perhaps burnt someday,
because they are too beautiful to behold”?
I do not
think Donovan’s infatuation was unnatural or his quest excessive. Instead, I
would say this: Donovan did not adequately prepare himself. He did not honor
the mystery he sought to embrace. He did not create a sacred space where he and
the undine queen could meet on equal terms. He did not hold in his heart that
wisdom every true magician knows: when to guard the boundaries of the world and
when to dissolve them for the sake of love.
This is what
happened: Istiphul’s touch and embrace were so compelling, so mind-altering,
that poor Donovan forgot there was a Donovan left without a mind back on the
shore not far from Dublin. To wit, Donovan forgot to return to his body.
So strong can
be the power of desire that breath, heartbeat, and the hunger of the flesh are
not enough to stay the quest for gratification. This was such an example. Young
Donovan’s body fell into a coma. Without a soul, the body did not last very
long, only a day or so. It soon grew cold, and the heart forgot how to
beat—there was no sign that Donovan’s soul would ever return.
So let us say
for the sake of argument, if you wish for an explanation, that Donovan’s soul
was out of its element. When the season of desire had passed, his soul sought
again the shore of life and found another body in which to be born. This was a
boy child who, when he grew to be a man, found work far from the sea.
A desert
would not be dry enough for his liking! He did not wish to hear any reminder of
that terrible, heart-wrenching longing and soul-shattering call of the ocean.
Hidden in waves and even in the taste of salt was that specter of beauty with
which the sea called, “Come, Donovan, I will be your lover again; come far from
land and be with me under the sea—ride your dreams to me, young Donovan.”
However, it
was not Istiphul who called but only his own memory
and unfortunate obsession. The man was haunted by the choice of another too
faint to recall, who unwisely sought to have intercourse with an unfathomable
beauty, a beauty wisely hidden in the mysterious depths of the sea.