poetry by RICK KEMPA
(after Neruda)
Fern has given me
a small, square box
which she made out of glass
all by herself,
with a mirror-bottom,
lavender sides,
and a precious turquoise
butterfly lid,
and so I am afoot
throughout the house
looking for paperclips
to put in it.
Like ladybugs that swarm
by the millions
to the mountain peaks
in the summer,
they emerge to meet me:
between cushions, under rugs,
in the washing machine,
the spare-change dish.
I peel apart the dust balls
that live beneath my desk
and there they are,
pearls.
(In the closet,
the vacuum cleaner--
belly of the whale,
angel of plenty.)
Some, contorted
beyond themselves
by nervous fingers,
I reform.
Some I find
fastening papers
together, and I
do them honor.
The one on the front step
holding its ground
through comings and goings
al winter long
I leave there,
testimonial
to all paperclips
that enter.
If I ever allow my paperclip box to grow empty,
may the mirror break, the butterfly escape,
for I am not deserving.
If ever I fail to stoop for a paperclip on the loose,
may a whirlwind visit my files,
may I never get organized.
If I am ever so lost as to purchase paperclips,
may all small things that inhabit my house
desert me.
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