When in nineteen-thirty-seven, Etta Moten, sweetheart
 of our Art Study group, kept her promise, as if clocked,
 to honor my house at our first annual tea, my pride
 tipped sky, but when she, Parisian-poised and as smart
 as a chrome-toned page from Harper’s Bazaar, gave my shocked
 guests this hideous African nude, I could have cried.
 And for many subsequent suns, we, who had placed apart
 this hour to proclaim our plunge into modern art, mocked
 her “Isn’t he lovely?” whenever we eyed this thing,
 for by every rule we’d learned, we’d been led to discern
 this rankling figure as ugly. It hunched in a squat
 as if someone with maliciously disfiguring intent
 had flattened it with a press, bashing its head,
 bloating its features, making huge bulging blots
 of its lips and nose, and as my eyes in dread anticipation
 pulled downward, there was its navel, without a thread
 of covering, ruptured, exposed, protruding from a pot
 stomach as huge as a mother-to-be’s, on short, bent legs,
 extending as far on each side as swollen back limbs
 of a turtle. I could look no farther and nearly dispensed
 with being polite while pretending to welcome her gift.
 But afterwards, to the turn of calendar pages, my eyes would skim
 the figure appraising this fantastic sight,
 until, finally, I saw on its stern
 ebony face, not a furniture polished, shellacked shine,
 but a radiance, gleaming as though a small light
 had flashed internally; and I could discern
 through the sheen that the bulging eyes
 were identical twins to the bulging nose.
 The same symmetrical form was dispersed again
 and again through all the bulges, the thighs
 and the hands and the lips, in reverse, even the toes
 of this fast turning beautiful form were a selfsame chain,
 matching the navel. This little figure stretched high
 in grace, in its with-the-grain form and from-within-glow,
 in its curves in concord. I became a hurricane
 of elation, a convert undaunted, who wanted to flaunt
 her discovery, parade her fair-contoured find.
 Art clubs, like leaves in autumn fall,
 scrabble against concrete and scatter.
 And Etta Moten, I read, is at tea with the Queen.
 But I find myself still framing word structures
 of how much these blazing forms ascending the centuries
 in their muted sheens, matter to me.










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