Patchwork
My name is the name;
my roots are purple.
My fertile middlemost
shakes my wreath heavy
with yellowing myrtle
then
oozes with myrrh.
Icy glass in my eyes.
The irides and whites
each hide hosts
of wilted narcissi.
My head is the sun.
My hair is a lion’s mane,
its fell rays fix my gaze
fore- and downwards.
My neck is the stump
of a pining evergreen.
I have a hunch
in my back.
My arms are blighted,
fruitless boughs.
I wrench my two
quaking knees.
Though my indices bend
opposite one another
and point nowhere,
these hands are my tools.
First as fists, fingers,
then palms—urge,
pens, and scale.
I stand on ten toes
sewn into steel,
four soles and heels, cast after
broken cobblestones.
On my thousandth day,
I wet the bed.
The mother of all monsters was mine,
and I missed a half of one brother
she’d smothered away.
I have white walls,
windowsills and white curtains.
A brown table and a silver couch
broken with sloth.
I reek of late coffee and crushed thyme.
I sweat urea and tar and scent
myself with neglect.
Weave me.