Ange Mlinko (2009)
It’s a little spa for the mind—seeing butterflies
set themselves down by the dozen like easels
on bromeliads, when out on the street the boutiques
are dilapidated, construction can’t be told from ruin.
A single taste bud magnified resembles an orchid
but what that one’s drinking from is a woman’s eye
which must be brineless. I wonder what she consumes
that her tears taste like fructose. For minutes she’s all its.
Then the moon rises and the river flows backward.
Composed of millions of tiny north poles, iron’s
punched out of the environment, hammered into railways.
Pubs serve shepherd’s pies with marcelled mashed-potato crusts
and each tree casts its shade in the form of its summary leaf.
Is a woman’s eye a single taste bud magnified?
Yet construction can’t be told from ruin.
Out on the street the boutiques are dilapidated
by the dozen like easels. And the mind—it’s a little spa.
from The New Yorker (May 5, 2009)
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