Nest And then there came a day that was a day
a world of my wanting with you in it
and all the small creatures came to our side
mewing and cheeping as small creatures do
a day I had wanted for a long time
a small-creature hour in the life of our day
where there were many places to lie down
and sigh and sleep and cogitate and hug
a huge happening among the small lives
a little cuddle with a dream in it
a coddled egg an apron with a bib
a nest for nourishing the ragged nerves
O robin O rabbit O bat O tiny vole
all flyers and burrowers come to us now
through our heat ducts and tear ducts and chimneys
come to us with your small-world intentions
that place where only we know how to live
where no one else knows what we say and do
no one knows the crumbs or the flies we eat
or the silly songs we hum as we sleep
Sinbad (or Symbiotic) I’m agog in the synagogue of love
and the sin is I don’t know my Sinbad
Is he Gog or Bes or the seven dwarves
He
has been an assault on my senses
a leap and a slam and a somersault
It was in summer that we fell in love
Love and hate he can’t get them straight
we should be sailing home in a schooner
He needs some synergy between his selves
instead there’s ergonomic confusion
He was erotic and he was erratic
he was scintillating and then savage
It’s a symbiotic thing my bio and his
I’ll need an antibiotic to fight him
That’s a symbol for a powerful drug
No I think I’ll need a synecdoche
I’ll need a singer in my synagogue
The sin is I’ve already left the dock
and I think I’ll need the seven voyages
Szymborska could write this better than me
I’m banging on my cymbals and crying out
Saudade saudade is what’s coming for me
I have to go now—though how I don’t know
Shoe I was going to meet my own death
and it stood me up
Or that is I stood up and said
not now Some days I know I won’t stand for it
Can you stand the thought of being dead
some days I think I’ll take it lying down
Sometimes it’s good to take a stand
though I think I want a standard-issue death
Shoe in shoe out without a horn
or play me a horn as I go and come
Or maybe not you but someone else
whose job it is to usher me forth
Stand down I don’t know what this means
Stand up and soft-shoe across the room
The issue is well do you like your life
Oh hand me a tissue I do want to cry
There’s no such thing as a stand-alone shoe
There are always two to cover feet
Think of not knowing how to feel
think of that while dancing on your heel
Death might not be up or even down
it could slip in sideways it could shuffle
It could stand very still
like a life on the stand of the world
Do hand me a tissue or a handkerchief
I don’t know whether to wave or cry
I don’t know whether to live or die
it could slide sideways after all
Like two shoes dancing in the living room
or two heels hopping in the dying room
Red Dress
It’s wrong to live wrong I was thinking this
and wringing my hands I wrung my hands
Wasn’t it right to live right and to write
about the right life rather than living wrong
and writing about the wrong life Which is righter
which is wronger The thing is
if you have the wrong life you don’t
want to tell thinking always that somehow you
will right it Righting and writing it’s a kind
of redress a new dress I’ll put on when I
rewrite my life I’ll run out and get it now
while there’s still time a red dress for joy
a red dress for redress and I’ll dress you
down as I walk out the door You’ll ring
and ring but I won’t rush back I won’t
write back You’ll be right and I’ll be
wronged and that’s what I’ll tell if I get
the time but not to you you won’t be told
You can read my redress in the papers
I’ll be out on the town in my red dress
Copyright © 2021 by Sarah Arvio. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.