The Wounded
Breakfast
A huge
shoe mounts up from the horizon, squealing and grinding forward on
small wheels, even as a man sitting to breakfast on his veranda is
suddenly engulfed in a great shadow almost the size of the
night.
He
looks up and sees a huge shoe ponderously mounting out of the
earth. Up in the unlaced ankle-part an old woman
stands at a helm behind the great tongue curled forward; the thick
laces dragging like ships' rope on the ground as the huge thing
squeals and grinds forward; children everywhere, they look from the
shoelace holes, they crowd about the old woman, even as she pilots
this huge shoe over the earth. . .
Soon
the huge shoe is descending the opposite horizon, a monstrous snail
squealing and grinding into the earth. . .
The man
turns to his breakfast again, but sees it's been wounded, the yolk
of one of his eggs is bleeding. . .
The
Automobile
A man had just married an
automobile.
But I
mean to say, said his father, that the automobile is not a person
because it is something different.
For
instance, compare it to your mother. Do you see
how it is different from your mother? Somehow it
seems wider, doesn't it? And besides, your mother
wears her hair differently.
You
ought to try to find something in the world that looks like
mother.
I have
mother, isn't that enough that looks like mother?
Do I have to gather more mothers?
They
are all old ladies who do not in the least excite any wish to
procreate, said the son.
But you
cannot procreate with an automobile, said father.
The son
shows father an ignition key. See, here is a
special penis which does with the automobile as the man with the
woman; and the automobile gives birth to a place far from this
place, dropping its puppy miles as it goes.
Does
that make me a grandfather? said father.
That
makes you where you are when I am far away, said the
son.
Father
and mother watch an automobile with a just married sign on
it growing smaller in a road.
The
Fall
There
was a man who found two leaves and came indoors holding them out
saying to his parents that he was a tree.
To
which they said then go into the yard and do not grow in the
living-room as your roots may ruin the carpet.
He said
I was fooling I am not a tree and he dropped his
leaves.
But his
parents said look it is fall.
A Cottage in the
Wood
He has
built himself a cottage in a wood, near where the insect rubs its
wings in song.
Yet,
without measure, or proper sense of scale, he has made the cottage
too small. He realizes this when only his hand
will fit through the door. He tries the stairs to
the second floor with his fingers, but his arm wedges in the
entrance. He wonders how he will cook his
dinner. He might get his hands through the
kitchen window. But even so, he will not be able
to cook enough on such a tiny stove.
He
shall also lie unsheltered in the night, even though a bed with its
covers turned down waits for him in the
cottage.
He lies
down and curls himself around the cottage, listening to the insect
that rubs its wings in song.
The Broken
Daughter
His
daughter had broken. He took her to be repaired.
. .If you'll just pump-up her backside, and rewire her hair. .
.
This
girl needs a whole new set of valves, and look at all those
collision marks around her face, said the
mechanic.
I just
want her fixed-up enough to use around the house; for longer trips
I have my wife.
Cinderella's Life at
the Castle
After
Cinderella married the prince she turned her attention to minutiae,
using her glass slipper as a magnifying lens.
When at
court she would wear orange peels and fish tins, and other decorous
rubbish as found in back of the castle.
You are
making me very nervous, said the prince.
But
Cinderella continued to look at something through her glass
slipper.
Did you
hear me? said the prince.
Cinderella's mouth hung open as she continued to look at something
through her glass slipper.
Did you
hear me, did you hear me, did you hear me? screamed the
prince.
A Journey Through the
Moonlight
In
sleep when an old man's body is no longer aware of its boundaries,
and lies flattened by gravity like a mere of wax in its bed. . .It
drips down to the floor and moves there like a tear down a cheek. .
.Under the back door into the silver meadow, like
a pool of sperm, frosty under the moon, as if in his first nature,
boneless and absurd.
The
moon lifts him up into its white field, a cloud shaped like an old
man, porous with stars.
He
floats through high dark branches, a corpse tangled in a tree on a
river.
Summer, Forty Years
Later
He
struggles out of a closet where his mother had hung him forty years
ago.
She
didn't understand children; she probably thought he was something
made of cloth.
He
thinks he as waited long enough for her to understand children,
even though he is no longer a child.
After
forty years a man has a right to seek the hallway; after all, he
might even hope for the front door--and who knows, perhaps even a
Nobel Prize for patience!
From
the front porch he sees that the midday sky is darker than he
remembered it; the green of the lawn and trees has also
darkened: too many nights, too many coats of
varnish. . . .
This is
not the same summer, the color is gone. . .
. . .
That little boy who is always passing the house with his wagon has
turned into a little old man collecting garbage. .
.