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            Women Combing Their Hair    
            
              It is essential to do the same subject over
              again, 
              ten times, a hundred times... 
              Degas to Bartholme 
             
            I. 
            No Apollo with his raging, empty cart. 
            The day's a gauzy shoreline plumbed and squared 
             
            so the sea can be reframed here as a sturdy table 
            crammed with loot: a scribble of eel-like ribbon, 
             
            a bottle without a note, a mirror-back (the glass, 
            turned down, records a restless turquoise) 
             
            and one plate that could easily have dropped 
            from a passing boat and by now is smoothed with salt, 
             
            reusable. A bowl and jug sail past, a humble joke. 
            Gold walls beat down. Two women work in silence, 
             
            a bourgeoise drowned in a hazy gown whose hair 
            drifts backwards toward a sterner archetype 
             
            who stands aloof to watch the billows mend, 
            or, on those mornings when the other's tresses 
             
            seem more like horizon pulled too near, 
            begins to rake with a gilded, slanted stare. 
             
             
            II. 
            She's late, will wield the comb herself. But braids 
            have loosened everywhere�that the mirror's become 
            one stiff, brown-handled curl seems fair, 
            but a smudged patch of floor lies out of reach, 
            an animal wafts through her on mahogany air, 
            and what's laid out (a drifty sheath) seems flimsier 
            than what she's wearing. Do these thoughts 
            so hurt her head she feels compelled to bend 
            and clasp it? Is it that when the last dark lock's 
            pinned back and up she'll simply vanish? Or that 
            her favorite Chinese vase, now flowerless, still wears 
            the patient, pooched-out belly of another woman, 
            one who offers the set's last sturdy cup, 
            into which night has been dropped like too-little antidote? 
             
             
            III. 
            The truce between ribbon-sleeved efficiency and disabille 
            is off when both unpin their figure-of-eightish whorls, 
             
            step away from their skirts to lounge in slips. 
            We're not even sure what time of day upends 
             
            this odd, fin-de-siecle room (orange quilts and bolts 
            the iron bedstead) but it seems undone as they are, 
             
            perhaps as young, when the redhead squares her stance 
            and sweeps her hair forward, curtaining her face 
             
            so her friend can chase its fire down her own pale arm. 
            They'll work the usual knot between them, 
             
            what an older woman might suggest could be hidden by a hat 
            or wound into a sleek, soon-to-be chic chignon, 
             
            while an older one still would insist it should be featured, 
            like a classic, persimmon-colored brooch. 
             
             
            IV. 
            Her bed has been absconded with, as has her room, 
            her gown and friend, though the way she was drawn 
            originally has left behind the halo of another woman 
            (or maybe this is only the ghost of her own head 
            bobbing as she works). She's a woman of predicaments 
            but busy, naked, as traceable as a signature. 
            Still, what moves within and without her, though similar 
            and plainly marked, flaunt opacity like a pearl of doubt 
            and only her downstroking comb reminds us 
            that at any time now the auburn torrent will reach her toes 
            and be transposed into a burnished flight of stairs 
            she might then climb easily, being so at home, 
            arriving dry and unannounced at the same sly thought 
            that still dangles from her foot in one red slipper.
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