Flemish Beauty
by Talvikki Ansel

Yesterday, all winter,
I had not thought of pears, considered:
pear.  The tear-shaped, papery core,
precise seeds. This one channeled
through with worm tunnels.
Bruises, a rotten half—
sometimes there’s nothing left
to drop into the pot.

                                  That phrase
I could have said: “you still
have us…”
                  The knife
slides easily beneath the skins,
top to base, spiraling
them away.

The insubstantial us.
It could as well be the pear
talking to the river, turning to
the grass (“you still have us”).
Besides, it’s just
me
a pear in my hand (the slop bucket full
of peels)—and sometimes, yes, that
seems enough: a pear—

                                      this larger one,
yellow-green, turning to red:
“Duchess” maybe, “Devoe,”
or what I want to call it: “Flemish
Beauty.”
                 When I can’t sleep,
I’ll hold my hand as if I held
a pear, my fingers mimicking
the curve. The same curve
as the newel post
I’ve used for years, swinging
myself up to the landing, always
throwing my weight back. And always
nails loosening, mid-bound.


Abstracted from
My Shining Archipelago
Copyright 1997 by Yale University

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