Authors: Jane Shore
only to be roused for a makeshift tea party
when a younger child came to visit.
Yet I often long to play with “Emma,”
who was such good company, after all,
and who lies unkempt, ear to her “boom box,”
on the top bunk of her bunk bed.
I wish I could brush her lifelike hair,
wipe her face and dress her up again.
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New catalogues keep arriving in the mail.
Though Emma has lost interest, I can't resist
paging through things to buy (
camisa, mantilla
)
for Josefina (with a Spanish
J
),
who lived on a
rancho
in New Mexico in 1824,
and comes with her own line of furniture...
I'm afraid I'll have to pass on her
and on all future “Girls of Tomorrow,”
who have yet to ride the assembly line's
long fallopian tube of Time;
the girls my daughter's daughters' daughtersâ
whose faces I'll never see,
whose names I can't imagineâ
Mirror/Mirrorwill carry, as I once carried mine.
You can't step twice into the same mirror,
said Heraclitus, of the river's mirror.
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A vessel holding water was the first mirror.
A mirror held to nostrils, life's last mirror.
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“Who is fairest?” the queen asked her mirror.
A vampire has no reflection in a mirror.
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Those backward letters without a mirror
spell
AMBULANCE
in your rear-view mirror.
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After Mom died, I covered all the mirrors
with cloth, sat seven days without mirrors.
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Staring at myself staring in my mirror,
“I” became the “other” in the mirror.
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Watching themselves making love in the mirror,
they were aroused by the couple in the mirror.
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The amputee stood at an angle that mirrored
his phantom limb, now visible, mirrored.
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In the
Arnolfini Wedding Portrait
's mirror,
its painter's captive in that convex mirror.
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A palindrome is another kind of mirror
like the couplets in a ghazal's mirror.
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Her beloved's eyes were her only mirror.
Seven bad years when he broke a mirror.
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I avoid, when I can, cruel three-way mirrors.
“Mute surfaces,” Borges called mirrors.
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As Vanity combs her long hair in the mirror,
an old bald skull awaits in the mirror.
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Standing between two facing mirrors,
I shrank down a long hallway of mirrors.
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Which Jane are you? I asked my mirror.
GaslightMy mirror answered,
Ask another mirror
.
He points out that she fidgets and wrings her hands,
so she sits on them when he's near.
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When the telephone rings and she answers,
no one's on the line.
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And she doesn't remember his telling her
about the dinner party on Friday.
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If he had, she would have brought her dress
to the dry cleaner. And washed her hair.
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Then one Sunday, looking up a number
in his address book, she finds
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a snapshot of a woman
she doesn't know. A stranger.
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He says it's a bookmark.
Has no idea how it got there. Or
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who this woman is, or the numbers repeated
on last month's phone bill, or why
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she doesn't trust him. Like Paulaâ
exactly like the wife in
Gaslight
.
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And isn't he her very own Charles Boyer,
the husband who calls his wife hysterical,
Â
high-strung, absent-minded,
inclined to imagine things?
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Any similarity to actual persons, living or dead,
is purely coincidental, says the disclaimer.
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The chandelier does not convey.
It was your mother's. You'll take it with you
when you move. But all the fixtures and fittings,
anything attached to the property, conveys.
It stays. Toilets and ceiling fans convey,
and the refrigerator dispensing crushed ice and cubes
when it's in the mood.
Â
And when the professionals are done with it,
your house is as bland as when you first bought it,
uncluttered, impersonal as a hotel.
Your daisies replaced with a funereal bouquet.
As for the Tomato Bisque foyerâtoo quirky.
Now it's beige.
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The creaky eleventh stair;
the leaky faucet, Muzak to your insomnia;
the Japanese maple scratching the screen;
the church bells, when you moved in,
ringing at fifteen-minute intervals, interrupting
your every thought, then you stopped hearing them;
the limos and hearses parked across the street,
drivers in dark suits smoking, waiting for the wedding
or the funeral to endâthey all convey.
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They say you can't take it with you, but you can.
You're not going to heaven, you're just moving.
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The roofer, the gardener, the plumber,
the stonemason who cobbled a path
of flagstones to the front door,
journeymen you relied on, like family, do not convey.
The kisses, the arguments on the porch,
tears washed down the drain do not convey.
But the shutters and awnings and azaleas, pink
and darker pink, that bloomed annually without fail
on your daughter's birthday, and the gigantic
tulip poplar you were afraid a storm would uproot,
topple, crushing your neighbors' roof, killing
that nice elderly coupleâthey convey.
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Long after the open house, the contract, the closing,
driving past the church, you find yourself,
as if in a trance, pulling into your old driveway.
The house looks the same, but different.
New shutters. New fence.
Where to Find UsA bike tipped over on the lawn.
After you've crossed the “singing bridge,”
and passed Legare's Farm Marketâfresh
pumpkins, peas, pick-your-own strawberriesâ
drive two more miles, give or take a tenth.
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Here's where my husband always said,
“At Peck Hill Road hang a sharp left,”
and I'd add my two cents, just to irk him,
“But you're not at Peck Hill Road yet!”
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I always hated it when he interrupted me
giving directions, and he hated it when
I'd point out every landmark along
the way: my woman's crow's-nest viewâ
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not my husband's God's-eye viewâ
directions we bickered over for forty years.
Watch for the tilted green wooden pole.
You'll miss it. Everyone misses the turn
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the first time. For a century and a half,
it was “Left at the old sugar shack,”
and people knew exactly where to turn,
until it collapsed and was dismantled,
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its barn board sold as fancy wainscoting
for designer kitchens.
You
may see only
an empty space, but to
us
that shack's
still disappearing board by board.
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When was the last time you saw us?
You'd have to be blind not to see
our three-story barn's rusted roof
up ahead, and our 1840s farmhouse.
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Are the clapboards still white?
This house just didn't want to be painted,
it liked being naked, no matter how
many coats we'd apply, it blistered
Â
and peeled the minute after the paint
dried. If you're not stuck behind
a swaying hay wagon or snow plow,
from Montpelier it should take you
Â
twenty minutes, tops.
Stick to my directions, you won't get
lost. If you'd listened to my husband,
you'd be halfway to Montreal.
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Though it may look like no one's home,
the mud room door is always open.
We're in the back pasture, waiting,
Rainbow Weatherburied under the crabapple tree.
First my body feels it, like hunger
or an itch prickling my entire skin,
and the light outside looks odd,
saturated, tinted greenish gold,
so I drop the spoon, or the book
I'm reading, and hurry to the back
porch, where a sun shower's busy
Â
pelting the pasture's tall grass.
When it happens, it's always
in the late afternoon, and always
directly over the crabapple tree:
a faint shimmer that intensifies,
steeping the sky in a seven-banded
cord of color that lasts a minute,
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then vanishes. Or it may loiter
a half hourâneighbors phone neighbors
to go look outside. Occasionally
it's a lucky doubleâthe sign
that told me I was pregnant.
And because I know exactly where
it will be, I love to show it off.
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I point. I wait. And it appears,
as if commanded, to an awed round
of applause. Greg Mosher, who sold us