Shattering the Bell Jar
It happens to all of us
With our dark hair that we pass on like syphilis
Mother to daughter, and back again.
Or maybe it's our round faces that submit themselves
Unknowingly to the world.
Little hands and long nails that grab a pencil so well
Know how to bleed on paper.
And I sit
In the cold arms of a magnolia
Drinking the blood from my lineage
After falling into my familiar fate.
The blister of a thousand stings in the Garden of Eden
Where the little blue shoes patter
Then romp
And kick
And pull flowers from the beds
As their fathers taught them to.
I need a key and a door.
Or an impassioned mallet,
To break
And crack my wallpapered cell
To cut up the pretty bicycles
That someone plastered over the peepholes.
I need a place to shed out of this coveted skin,
Some matches to burn down the layers of bloody porcelain tile.
To lace the flowers with thorns
And let them grow.
[Photo credit: "Sweet is the Sting," by Mary Chiaramonte]