I draw a storyteller
who looks like Duchamp’s commode,
which looks like the Madonna
in the Stieglitz photo.
I set my storyteller
in a cut field by a shrine,
which began as a Pissarro
edging into a Cezanne.
Now my storyteller waits.
She knocks back a conical vase.
Tugging on my paper’s edge,
her immanence telling me, play.
If, under the Picasso, a student tried
to render the Jardin de Laberint
only to surrender all her forms,
and if, beneath a porringer upheld
between a bowing woman and a child
another figure, hidden, dwells,
what, in the end, was there concealed?
Mice gnaw at roots. Hermits scratch signs
into the ostracons, before they plow them home.
And where I whet my finger on this recto
words rolled like sown men that hail and rise.
Keen with witness, with eyes spinning
like obols, I cut them down for reaping.