Authors: Jane Shore
The telephone company had cut down a tree
to erect, in its place, a sort of monument to a treeâ
an imported, pitch-stuck pole with its own tin badge and number
linking house to house and voice to voice.
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That night when we fed the fire, the embers
glowed under the logs the flames systematically ate,
nibbling slowly, deliberately,
from left to right. Like reading.
Sometimes, a fire devours a book all at once
in one sitting; or slowly, disinterestedly, leafs through it,
turning its pages to ash one by one.
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There's pleasure in watching it ignite
and flare, pleasure that does not want to stopâ
in looking around the room
and throwing in anything that will burn.
A paper napkin thrills the flame,
but briefly; a chair causes greater excitementâ
its rush seat a catherine wheel sputtering, shooting sparks.
            And punching a hole in plaster
and snapping the laths ribbing the walls;
and peeling shingles from the gray
bird wings of the roof
until the whole house burns with pleasure.
Then the fire died down. We closed the book.
A few of the ashes' soft feathers
drifted lazily up the chimney shaft
Persian Miniatureinto the vanished daylight.
Two hairs plucked from the chest of a baby squirrelâ
the brush of the miniaturist freezes an entire population.
Within each quarter inch,
a dozen flowers puncture the spongy ground,
and even the holes where tent poles stuck
bear ornamental weeds.
Upon a wooden balance beamâthis painting's equatorâ
a cat is prancing.
Other animals are eating or being milked:
three spotted goats, a suede camel,
half a donkey's face lost in an embroidered feedbag.
Under a canopy, seven elders in pajamas radiate
like spokes around a bridegroom;
white beards frost the elders' chins.
Outside, a fat iron cauldron squats upon a fire
whose flames spike up golden minarets.
A kneeling boy pours coffee;
his pitcher handle, the size of a human eyelash,
is larger than the bridegroom's mustache.
A wedding! Is the bride asleep somewhere?
The bride's attendants hover in tiers
like angels in heaven's scaffolding,
but heaven, here, is the hanging gardens,
or maybe tent poles are holding heaven up.
Lappets of a tent fold back
on a woman holding her soft triangular breast
to an infant's mouth. The rug she sits on
flaps straight up behind her, like wallpaper.
One-sixteenth of an inch away,
a ram is tethered to the picture frame,
but where's the bride going to fit?
In the left-hand corner of the painting,
across what little of the sky remains,
two geese fly in tandem, pulling two wheels,
two mechanical knotted clouds.
Maybe they are pulling a storm behind them.
Crouched, swirling above the human event,
if the storm fits, it could ruin everythingâ
smash up the whole abbreviated acre,
flush the bride from sleepâ
while the bridegroom sweeps it all away
and enters her innocent tent like thunder,
The Glass Slippershattering the distance he's had to keep.
The little hand was on the eight.
It scoured Cinderella's face, radiant
since her apotheosis; blue dress,
blonde pageboy curled like icing on a cake.
The wristwatch came packed in a glass slipperâ
really plastic, but it looked like glassâ
like one of my mother's shoes, but smaller.
High transparent heel, clear shank and sole,
it looked just big enough to fit me.
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I stuffed my left foot halfway in,
as far as it would go.
But when I limped across the bedroom rug,
the slipper cut its outline
into my swelling heel.
No matter which foot I tried,
I couldn't fit the ideal
that marks the wearer's virtue,
so I went about my business
of being good. If I was good enough,
in time the shoe might fit.
I cleaned my room, then polished
the forepaws of the Georgian chair;
while in the kitchen, squirming in her highchair,
a bald and wizened empress on her throne,
my baby sister howled one red vowel
over and over.
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Beside the white mulch of their chenille bedspread,
my parents' Baby Ben wind-up alarm
was three minutes off.
Each night, its moon face,
a luminous and mortuary green,
guided me between my parents' sleeping forms
where I slept
until the mechanism of my sister's hunger,
accurate as quartz,
woke my mother and me moments before
the alarm clock sprang my father to the sink
and out the door.
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Seven forty-five. His orange Mercury
cut a wake of gravel in the driveway.
Like a Chinese bride I hobbled after him,
nursing my sore foot in a cotton sock.
Cinderella's oldest sister lopped off
her own big toe with a kitchen knife
to make the slipper fit, and her middle sister
sliced her heel down to size.
The dumbstruck Prince failed to notice,
while ferrying to the palace
each false fiancée,
the blood filling the glass slipper.
The shoehorn's silver tongue
consoled each one in turn,
Dresses“When
you
are Queen, you won't
need
to walk.”
After Rilke's “Some Reflections on Dolls”
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On wire hangers, on iron shoulders,
the dresses float in limbo,
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flat-chested spinsters who will
not dance. It is night,
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the hands of the clock circle
their twelve black mountains,
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upstairs the children are dreaming,
and over his red and black inks
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the father figures the books,
the store as dark
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as the inside of the safe.
Blouses like airy armor, trousers
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that marched off the cutting table
through the needle's eye.
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Dresses, it is your nature
to be possessed. With feverish hands,
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your jailer will free you, undo
the two pearl buttons on your cuff
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while her lover hitches up your skirt,
his rough wool against your silk . . .
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eventually those caresses will wear
you away. One day you will be
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the crushed body in the ragbag,
the purple in the pauper's closet,
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the hand-me-down passed from one sister
to another in a distant state.
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Your pockets will fill with her
perfume, ticket stubs, loose tobacco,
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the telegram that changes everything
the moment it is read, and memory
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makes you too painful to wear.
Houndstooth, black-watch plaid,
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mauve, teal, hunter green; shades
flaring and dying with the seasonsâ
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but not for the mannequins heaped
in the cellar under the store.
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Rashes of plaster dust cover
the gash where the wrist screws
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into the arm; modestly dusting,
like talcum, the chipped torsos,
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bald heads, bald crotches,
and around each beautiful eye
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the corona of ten spiked lashes.
In the morning, the older daughter
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descends the fourteen stairs
to the store and tries on
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the frothy, white organza strapless,
dragging its hem like a tide
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across the fitting room floor.
And there you are in the mirror,
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up to your old tricks.
She'll curtsy for her adoring father,
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while her motherâ
mouth bristling with straight pinsâ
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kneels at her feet. The cash register
resumes its noisy music, browsers
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breeze in and out of the swinging
door. Sooner or later, each of you
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will attract your customer.
Not on your own volition will you
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enter the blazing street and pass
the sister whose smooth back
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you pressed against so long ago.
Not on your own volition
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will you dance at a daughter's wedding,
dance unwearyingly until dawn
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with energies not your own.
Nor for beauty's sake alone will you
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be chosen from among all the others,
when, in severe folds, you will outwear
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the body that entered your body willingly
A Luna Mothonce, and lost herself there.
For Elizabeth Bishop