Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Oh, Wow.

You (you, nebulous you) may ignore my posts and posts. I'm just gathering stuff I love. Stuff I can't let sift through my fingers without pinching.

Anatomy Test, Eleventh Grade
by: Valerie Loveland

The skinny girl in my class seems reptilian—
armored with an exoskeleton:
rib cage, collar bone dinosaur ridges.
Dangerous wrists and elbows jut,
shoulder blades poke the air like silky stone wings.

It's not fair,
she doesn't have to study.
She is her own cheat sheet—her fingers clink
down each of her xylophone ribs.
When she strikes each bone, it sings, ringing
its name: whisper jingle of the ear bones,
a long low drone from the femur.

Do I even have bones?

My sloppy disagreeable body swells. My bones retreat
into layers so thick, I would have had to start peeling
them away last night if I wanted to pass the test.

I find my knuckles, which I snap over and over,
trying to persuade them to tell me their names,
but they refuse.


link: from Wicked Alice

2 comments:

belann said...

I love this too. Keep posting.

Amara said...

I really liked this poem --just didn't have anything intelligent to say. I've met this girl --in fact she's got a few sisters in my ward. It feels like they're cheating at a lot of things in life, not just anatomy tests. Things come easier when you're skeletal seems like.