AND WHY IS THE WORLD so many, and my decor so single? Bugs, chairs, or feathers, garbage cans, motes alive in bright air, multi-hued catalogues for Christmas. Serials served in sit-com or bowl, one "I do" after another, and me, alone, in an attic at home, two children aloft in plane, ship or tree who don't hang, anymore, on my say. Not even Suleiman the Magnificent of me, I have one device—bind a band round my head to create the illusion and conjure the furniture of my ultimate sway. __ THE FORK KEEPS COMING BACK Chopsticks at the next table remind me that, in time, implements we employ fit the hand that uses, a knack that turns to a comfort when practiced over years. In my family, like many, it's a simple fork, too ordinary to notice clutched in a palm. Eating with my Oma, I held it in one palm though shifting left to right came easier to me, the way most Americans wield a fork. In high school, policing habits in a fit of imitation, I ended the lefty way for years. Amazing how aspects I display take turns, even those plain as my nose: fat lips turn to gobble a man's kisses. His broad palm passes and magically waves away years of averting my eyes from mirrors, giving me an unfractured oval when I see that I fit one woman's brand of beauty (as others fork out sums to look ethnic.) I belong, like a fork beside a knife. And my father, as he turns himself American, learning fresh slang to fit speech patterns his mother did not get. A palm hid a pack of Chesterfields, his mind, me, after studies and a love found in Germany—years. I was copper-haired and brash in girl years of dirty nails, rowdy manners; my fork craft did not please my dad, though it gave me nourishment enough. When she shuts up and turns to a boy for approval, he's got her in his palm, and no pose a girl assumes is likely to befit her style. What style? All I wanted was to fit in, distinctiveness the terror of those years of high school. My hoop-star boyfriend could palm the ball. Dwarfing me, he said, about the fork trick, "Don't ever do it in my house." It turns up in Brussels where he tries to copy it from me. Not a willing misfit, flirting or employing a fork, I watched myself for years. The impulse returns as chopsticks hit my palm. Now it's all up to me. ____ on AND WHY IS THE WORLD: This naked grab for power, as another poet called it, was my complaint while one of my children was on a plane headed back to his home in California, the other living in Seattle. Or it was engineered solely to get the name of Suleiman the Magnificent into one of my poems. on THE FORK KEEPS COMING BACK: Elaine Sexton, my gifted teacher, asked everyone in her workshop to write a sestina, a very old form I'd never tried. While I mulled it, I happened to remember how my father had watched my table manners, offering correction that may have betrayed some social insecurity. Anxiety turned out to be good for a poem. |