Homage to
Sharon
Stone
It's
early
morning. This is the "before,"
the
world hanging around in its wrapper,
blowzy, frumpy, doing
nothing:
my
neighbors, hitching themselves to the roles
of the unhappily
married, trundle their three
mastiffs down the street. I am
writing
this
book of poems. My name is Lynn Emanuel.
I am wearing a bathrobe
and curlers; from
my lips, a Marlboro drips ash on the text.
It is the
third of September ninteen.
And as I am writing this in my
trifocals
and slippers, across the street, Sharon Stone,
her head
swollen with curlers, her mouth
red and narrow as a dancing
slipper,
is rushed into a black limo. And because
these limos snake up
and down my street,
this book will be full of sleek cars
nosing
through the shadowy ocean of these words.
Every morning, Sharon
Stone, her head
in a helmet of hairdo, wearing a visor
of sunglasses,
is engulfed by a limo
the size of a Pullman, and whole fleets
of
these wind their way up and down
the street, day after day, giving to the
street
(Liberty Avenue in Pittsburgh, PA)
and the book I am writing,
an aspect
that is both glamorous and funereal.
My name is Lynn
Emanuel, and in this
book I play the part of someone writing
a book,
and I take the role seriously,
just as Sharon Stone takes
seriously
the role of the diva. I watch the dark
cars disappear her
and in my poem
another Pontiac erupts like a big animal
at the cool
trough of a shady curb. So,
when you see this black car, do not
think
it is a Symbol for Something. It is just
Sharon Stone driving
past the house
of Lynn Emanuel who is, at the time,
trying to write a
book of poems.
Or you could think of the black car as
Lynn
Emanuel, because, really, as an author,
I have always wanted to be a car,
even
though most of the time I have to be
the "I," or the woman
hanging wash:
I am a woman, one minute, then I am a man,
I am a
carnival of Lynn Emanuels:
Lynn in the red dress; Lynn sulking
behind
the big nose of my erection;
then I am the train pulling into the
station
when what I would really love to be is
Gertrude Stein spying
on Sharon Stone
at six in the morning. But enough about
that, back to
the interior decorating:
On the page, the town looks bald
and dim so I
turn up the amps on
the radioactive glances of bad boys.
In a kitchen,
I stack pans sleek with
grease, and on a counter there is a roast
beef
red as a face in a tantrum. Amid all
this bland strangeness is Sharon
Stone,
who, like an engraved invitation, is asking
me, Won't you,
too, play a role? I do not
choose the black limo rolling down the
street
with the golden stare of my limo headlights
bringing with me
the sun, the moon, and
Sharon Stone. It is nearly dawn; the sun
is a
fox chewing her foot from the trap;
every bite is a wound and every
wound
is a red window, a red door, a red road.
My name is Lynn
Emanuel. I am the writer
trying to unwrite the world that is all around
her.
from Then,
Suddenly-- by Lynn
EmanuelThe
White DressInventing Father in Las
VegasThe Dig
On Waking after Dreaming of
RaoulLike God,
Last Updated:
08/07/99
Created By: J.H. Brugos