Jane's Oppression
The doll of an
urban legend,
born on 5th avenue
and
made in Macy’s Herald Square,
threw away her
metro card.
To the woods
she walked;
her purse became a street mutt
and
the trees chipped her heels
into
below average-quality
hiking shoes.
The next top model of
indie wood fire cover albums,
a log from it
emerged in
her path, the
doll.
Like any new-found
rebellion,
this one saw a whole world
found right
at its feet.
This one stepped
down right
at its feet.
But this model was
muscular;
the revolution’s foot went
rolling across its
lean curves.
The water’s current,
finding itself more
lifted,
threw the foreigner against
its cold walls,
and turned this
antigen
back to its
doll state.
Had the tides
suppressed the new-found
life?
Or was this life meant
encapsulated, degraded,
and
not at all?