conceptual oyster

Around the world with two suitcases and a drawl thick as blackstrap molasses...

14 April 2007

a poem about us?

Poem: "Unwise Purchases" by George Bilgere from Haywire.
(c) UtahState University Press.
Reprinted with permission.

Unwise Purchases

They sit around the house not doing much of anything: the boxed set of the complete works of Verdi, unopened.The complete Proust, unread:

The French-cut silk shirts which hang like expensive ghosts in the closet and make me look exactly like the kind of middle-aged man who would wear a French-cut silk shirt:

The reflector telescope I thought would unlock the mysteries of the heavens but which I only used once or twice to try to find something heavenly in the windows of the high-rise down the road, and which now stares disconsolately at the ceiling when it could be examining the Crab Nebula:

The 30-day course in Spanish whose text I never opened,whose dozen cassette tapes remain unplayed,

save for Tape One, where I never learned whether the suave Americanconversing with a sultry-sounding desk clerk at a Madrid hotel about the possibility of obtaining a room actually managed to check in.

I like to thinkthat one thing led to another between them and that by Tape Six or sothey're happily married and raising a bilingual child in Seville or Terra Haute.

But I'll never know.
Suddenly I realizeI have constructed the perfect homefor a sexy, Spanish-speaking astronomer who reads Proust while listening to Italian arias,

and I wonder if somewhere in this teeming city there lives a woman with, say, a fencing foil gathering dust in the corner near her unused easel, a rainbow of oil paints drying in their tubes

on the table where the violins he bought on a whim lies entombed in the permanent darkness of its locked casenext to the abandoned chess set,

a woman who has always dreamed of becoming the kind of woman the man I've always dreamed of becoming has always dreamed of meeting.

And while the two of them discuss star clusters and Cézanne, while they fence delicate lying Castilian Spanish to the strains of Rigoletto,

she and I will stand in the steamy kitchen,
fixing up a little risotto,
enjoying a modest cabernet,
while talking over a day so ordinary
as to seem miraculous.

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