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 2008Eggs like these
 
 Easter morning
 and we haven’t colored eggs in years,
 but there are two in the little hollows in the fridge,
 pinkish-brown, courtesy of the chickens.
 We do our part with magic markers,
 and it’s our histories the two eggs
 wind up wearing, with the good humor
 and perspective on our years of troubles
 only time bestows. My egg becomes a face 
 mildly curious eyes,
 nose too prominent to be attractive,
 smile bulging with silver 
 all surrounded by ringlets on the verge of blue.
 When I was a girl, I tell you,
 there were men, women, boys, girls,
 cats, dogs, rabbits, birds, and turtles
 crowding the refrigerator door.
 Though I drew them all myself,
 they still surprised me every time
 I pulled the handle and the light flashed on.
 When you were a boy, you tell me,
 you spent an entire hour
 painting a Madonna and Child
 on an eggshell’s curved surface,
 and I’m wondering if today I’ll get to see
 the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel
 in miniature, but no, it’s Lenin.
 I would recognize him anywhere.
 And on the egg’s reverse, fireworks bloom
 above Red Square and words you outlived
 to ridicule: “The victory of Communist labor
 will be ours with eggs like these.”
 
 
 
 
											
										 
											
												
														
															all rights reserved Josephine Bridges ©2012-2013 | . |