Elegy: I Pass by the Erotic Bakery
 
  
The way the tits of lemon meringue whorled  
 
in the window that day  
looked at first like breasts, then more like paws of my grandfather's  
 
clubfoot Siamese.  
I want to believe that, after he died, the cat didn't  
 
gnaw off his face. I've heard it happens. I'd like to ask the pastry chef 
 
if his vision of whipped  
egg whites and sugar meant he saw, in a dream, that mangled paw 
 
pressed to my grandfather's chest. 
I know my grandfather  
 
died alone, with the TV on. I need to know  
he kept his face that day, in the green armchair, that the channel  
he chose as his heart slowed was not 
 
televangelism, but a bird documentary: dark-eyed juncos  
jilting the magnolias, fiercer than angels 
 
flying south. I need to know the show's voice-over 
was pitched in the gauzy  
 
timbre of lullaby--low and Latinate, Byzantine. Because  
hearing, during death, is the last  
 
faculty to go. And so, his last moments  
were filled with the wing beat of juncos, and a calm,  
 
omniscient voice: Fringilla nigra, ventre albo--black 
finch, with a white belly. Languid in heat, the meringue 
breasts cave a little, almost inscrutably 
  
burnt brown at the side-seams, and at the tips. I lick  
my lips, though I 
won't enter. I'm afraid 
 
like Christ they'd turn 
to flesh in my mouth. 
 
-  Anna Journey (from Blackbird)
 
 
 
  
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