Thirteen Ways of
Looking at a Table
I.
Underneath hills of
potatoes
And rivers of green
pea soup
Ran the blade of the
table.
II.
She was unsure if the
plain white cloth that covered it
Suited the feast on
the table
And matched the horror
and the glory of the occasion.
III.
The table grew between
them
Stretching into an
all-night wordless gluttony
IV.
They sat in fragrant
silence
A man and a woman
Waiting to be one
At the table laden
with unspoken words
V.
She did not know what
to offer him next
A sublime conversation
about Platonic shadows
Or the raillery of
juicy innuendoes
The table groaning
Under yet another
platter.
VI.
Rain knocked on the
window
Ever so gently
The table didn’t let
it in
But turned on them
instead
They suddenly felt
softer and lighter
As if they had never
eaten.
VII.
O fat people of the
city,
Why do you dream of
golden plates and silver spoons?
Why can you not see
that the table
Is all
You need?
VIII.
I know the delicate
flow of gourmet hors d'oeuvres
On clinquant trays
But I know, too,
That the table is
involved
In what I know.
IX.
When the food was
cleared away
The table stood in its
rectangular beauty
Without expectations.
X.
Wine stains and
breadcrumbs on the white tablecloth
Were the only memories
Of the first supper.
She dropped a knife.
XI.
They were still full
after dessert,
But getting hungry
again.
Since they ate their
words on an empty stomach,
Impatience and fear of
the unknown spilled like coffee
All over the table.
XII.
The table was no
longer between them
They wiped it dry from
tears.
XIII.
It was evening all
night
It never rained
The rising sun made
dust dance on the table
They ate and ate
All the words unheard,
unsaid, untasted.
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