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Monday, November 19, 2012

BATHING BEAUTIES (POEM)





               
                                                      Bathing Beauties


              Del Mar Beach,
              California

              I.

              Slipping sideways under Cinzano umbrellas,
              afternoon sun hammers ice
              through thin walls of tonic glasses,
              extruding beads of lime sweat.

              Greased bodies sizzle,
              layed out along the griddle
              that is the continent’s edge:
              so much sexual bacon.

              In the outdoor shower,
              bikinied teens preen.

              At the steps to the beach,
              where everyone can see,
              a couple stand
              so everyone can see.

              He is tall, blond,
              tan, seventeen.

              His muscles are from play,
              for playing with:
              not from work,
              not for working with.

              She is shorter, blonde,
              nubile, fourteen.

              She wears four small triangles
                          of blue cloth.

              She wears her self-assurance
              as if she had already done everything
              the older men under the Cinzano umbrellas
                       are wishing they could do with her
              and found it amusing.

              She tosses her hair,
              turning to devour
              the stares
              that are devouring her.

                                   



              II.

              She is eighty.
              She walks with a cane.
              She has trouble with the sand.

              At the other end of her life,
              the soft girl’s bones of her feet were
              broken, toes bent back under the arch
              to form the desired opening
              for a highborn man’s erection, then bound
              to heal, if that is the right word, into
              a different kind of foot.

              They are still bound,
              her childhood trapped there
              like butterflies pressed
              in a book.

              You can see
              she loves the sun.

              She walks carefully
              past the perfect couple
              past the sizzling Californians
              lifting her withered face
              pushing the cane with withered hands
              down to where the salt foam
              washes her shortened feet,
              down to where one wave’s foam
              smoothes the sand with its coming,
              withers the same sand with its leaving,
              the withered sand a mirror to her skin.

              She lifts her face
              smiles into the sun
              smiles toward the West,

              toward China.


                                                                                        (c) 2012 Dean Metcalf
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