Pre-Text
By Marie Ponsot
(for Douglas, at one)
Archaic, his gestures
hieratic, just like Caesar or Sappho
or Mary’s Jesus or Ann’s Mary or Jane
Austen once, or me or your mother’s you
the sudden baby surges to his feet
and sways, head forward, chin high,
arms akimbo, hands dangling idle,
elbows up, as if winged.
The features of his face stand out
amazed, all eyes as his aped posture
sustains him aloft
a step a step a rush
and he walks,
Young Anyone, his lifted point of view
far beyond the calendar.
What time is it? Firm in time
he is out of date—
like a cellarer for altar wines
tasting many summers in one glass,
or like a grandmother
in whose womb her
granddaughter once
slept in egg inside
grandma’s unborn daughter’s
folded ovaries.
Copyright Credit: "Pre-Text" from THE BIRD CATCHER by Marie Ponsot, copyright © 1998 by Marie Ponsot. Used by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved.
Source: The Bird Catcher (Alfred A. Knopf, 1998)