This poem is based on the myth of Arachne, a mortal transformed into a spider by Minerva, as punishment for weaving a bit too well.
I dreamed of her again last night.
She stood over me, inspecting
the weave I had created, looking
for flaws among its brazen threads.
It shone out with even more
brilliance in the dream – their
wanton lips the red of wild poppies,
lustful eyes a deep Tyrrhenian
blue.
It was a triumph; its beauty
and passion matched only by the
elegance of the gods themselves.
In my dream I watched her
understand a truth:
sometimes a mortal woman can
make the gods cry.
Enraged, she pulled at its threads,
unmade it before my eyes.
She tore me down, transformed me,
told me which was my place.
Now I sit here and spin a new thread.
My children and I are dream weavers –
we create the sky from pieces of glass,
we make sunsets from orange petals.
We are the artists.
We are the spinners.
They call me a monster
but all I ever did was
to try to outshine the sun