Traci Brimhall | Poetry
—Lauren Woods, Field Dress, 7′ x 6′ oil on linen
a yellow orb shifts against the shock of dark vertical bark, her back
split diagonal, flayed & a bright fleshy
suspension in the copse of trees, her hooves scrape packed dirt, legs
sway like she’s dancing on hindquarters & I could
take her body inside me, like the medicine I need, or wrap her
skinned hide, congealed blood flaking, a cloak against the coming
night & I’d wear her ears, pin her white-warning-tail to my backside
as regalia for all the deer-dead, but the painting only approaches
her in 2-d—a portal of slim brushstrokes, paint upon paint, so I step
into the field, from the left, outside the frame, push through tall
burnished grasses, bending slightly, my feet crush crickets, trample
late blooming goldenrod & I let the heat of the day leak out
of the air like a balloon popped & swirling, so I can become Field. Dress. Portal.
What’s the worst possible thing to ask of yourself? Maybe believing
in whatever makes demands on your own inner life, like how love
is supposed to save even the most hardened ones. Only this dead doe’s
head bows & whistles to the others, come find me—quick, like light,
or like all the seedpods’ sudden dispersal, their unrealized progeny float
away without a care for the end result.
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