Authors: Jane Shore
plenty of wine
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his gold mask
a perfect likeness
on which his highness
crayoned a faint mustache
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his silk tunic
a supply of papyrus
an ivory comb
with no missing teeth
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a mirror on which
to breathe a cloudâ
the tomb's only weather
that, and dust
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his dog
a golden ball
two old servants
curled at his feet
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under the bandages
pharaoh, a boy,
buried with his hands
in his pockets
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a star chart
carved on the ceiling
under which
Young Woman on the Flying Trapezea deep healing is taking place
Shooting with his Bolex,
my father kept nature in perspective.
He caught the trapeze artist catching
his partner in midair, swinging
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in and out of my line of sight.
I was five. In nightmares, the body
falls straight into the dreamer's eye;
he wakes before hitting bottom.
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Did I blink then, did I glance away,
the moment that she tumbled
like an angel out of heaven?
I don't remember, but I saw her fall.
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My father slows the projector down
frame by frame; the trapeze artist
aims for her partner, and somersaults.
Her partner's wavering hand
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connects with her sequined wrist;
but his other hand misses, clamping
shut on the air that frames her,
no connection, her body blurring
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its slurred speech, as scanning
the sawdust floor, the camera locates
the broken italic of her flesh.
No connection! I can't remember
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no matter how many times I see her,
no matter how many times
my father runs the film.
Projecting in reverse, he has her
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climb the ladder of light
one more time, for my benefit,
but he can't rescue her
from gravity forever.
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Backward, she bullets up toward
the bull's-eye of her partner's fist,
her face enlarged in its unknowingâ
and lands back on the platform,
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squarely on her own two feet!
Spliced into the same reel, unreal
documents of the commonplace.
A picnic under way. Then it is Sunday.
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The living room upholstery is brand new.
The Frigidaire is white-enamel white.
Then, a lucky break to catch this,
I am crawling, hoisting myself up
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my mother's skirts to take my first
steps, fighting to keep my balance,
staggering toward whatever it was
I reached for out of the camera frameâ
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held and lost in that drifting
instant of attention,
from which the body performs
The Russian Dollits miraculous escape.
After Elder Olson
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Six inches tall, the Russian doll
stands like a wooden bowling pin.
The red babushka on her painted head
melts into her shawl and scarlet
peasant dress, and spreading over that,
the creamy lacquer of her apron.
A hairline crack fractures the equator
of her copious belly,
that when twisted and pulled apart,
reveals a second doll inside,
exactly like her, but smaller,
with a blue babushka and matching dress.
An identical crack circles her middle.
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Did Fabergé fashion a doll like her
for a czar's daughter? Hers would be
more elaborate, of course, and not a toyâ
emerald eyes, twenty-four-karat hair,
and with filigreed petticoats
like a chanterelle's gills blown inside out.
An almost invisible fault line
would undermine her waist,
and a platinum button that springs her body open.
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Now I have two dolls: mother and daughter.
Inside the daughter, a third doll is waiting.
She has the same face,
the same figure,
the same fault she can't seem to correct.
Inside her solitary shell
where her duplicate selves are breathing,
she can't be sure
whose heart is beating, whose ears
are hearing her own heart beat.
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Each doll breaks into
a northern and a southern hemisphere.
I line them up in descending order,
careful to match each womb
with the proper headâa clean split,
for once, between the body and the mind.
A fourth head rises over the rim
of the third doll's waist,
an egg cup in which her descendants grow
in concentric circles.
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Until last, at last, the two littlest dolls,
too wobbly to stand upright,
are cradled in her cavity as if waiting to be born.
Like two dried beans, they rattle inside her,
twin faces painted in cruder detail,
bearing the family resemblance
and the same unmistakable design.
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The line of succession stops here.
I can pluck them from her belly like a surgeon,
thus making the choice between fullness
and emptiness; the way our planet itself
is rooted in repetitions, formal reductions,
the whole and its fractions.
Generations of women emptying themselves
like one-celled animals; each reproducing,
apparently, without a mate.
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I thought the first, the largest, doll
contained nothing but herself,
but I was wrong.
I assumed that she was young
because I could not read her face.
Is she the oldest in this matriarchyâ
holding within her hollow each daughter's
daughter? Or the youngestâ
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carrying the embryo of the old woman
she will become? Is she an onion
all
the way through? Maybe,
like memory shedding its skin,
she remembers all the way back to when
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her body broke open for the first time,
to the child of twelve who fits inside her still;
who has yet to discover that self,
always hidden, who grows and shrinks,
Anthonywho multiplies and divides.
Your absent name at roll call was more present
than you ever were, forever
on parole in the back of the class.
The first morning you were gone,
we practiced penmanship to keep our minds
off you. My fist
uncoiled chains of connecting circles,
oscilloscopic hills,
my carved-up desk as rippled as a washboard.
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A train cut you in half in the Jersey marshes.
You played there after school.
I thought of you and felt afraid.
One awkward
a
multiplied into a fence
running across the page.
I copied out two rows of
b
's.
The caboose of the last
d
ran smack against
the margin. Nobody even liked you!
My
e
's and
f
's traveled over the snowy landscape
on parallel tracksâfaint blue guidelines
that kept our letters even.
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The magician sawed his wife in half,
then passed his hand through the gulf of air
where her waist should be.
Divided into two boxes, she turned and smiled
and all her ten toes flexed.
I skipped a line.
I dotted the disconnected body of each
i
.
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At the bottom of the page,
I wrote your name. And erased it.
ThumbelinaWrote it, and erased again.
Thumbelina, poor sleeping child,
swaying in the hammock of a leaf,
nested in my left hand the whole
summer of my seventh year,
her skull just the size of my thumbnail,
her bird heart ticking against my pulse.
Only a child, I was an only child,
small for my age, but a giant
towering over a clump of crabgrass.
A belly button in the dirt,
the anthill was the slave plantation
I oversaw, ants laboring
in the fork-raked furrows,
hoisting heavy sacks of cottonâ
crumbs twenty times their body weight.
To be a giant, you must learn to step
softly, carefully, so as not to hurt
the working earth.
That year in school I was learning
how to add. The backyard thundered
with my mother's yelling. “Ssh.
Don't wake the sleeping Thumbelina,”
I'd whisper into my left hand.
“Don't hurt the sleeping child,”
the shell of my left hand echoed.
At home I was learning to tell time.