LANI BURSHTEIN is a schoolteacher, artist and writer living in Toronto. Her poetic interests include disaster, history, visual arts, opulence, childhood and constructed identities
The following poems explore the literary device of prosopopeia, or giving voice to inanimate objects. But some objects aren’t quite so lifeless as we’d like to think, are they?
TECHNICOLOUR’S ROSE
Romance isn’t dead—I’ve dyed. I’m red.
Twinkle can be tooled. My throat is jewelled.
Vamps have sultry angles. Mine are spangled.
Divas can be lifeless—this one’s priceless.
Technicolour’s rose: refracting bows.
Twins of mirrored face: my soles can pace.
Glamour grows through time. My road rewinds.
Homeward-bound she wheels; clicking heels.
Brick’s iconic trippers; ruby slippers.
QUEEN OF HEARTS
Observe my curves, my cuts, my twinkling facets
Admire my frozen fire, my glassine assets
Regard the artisans that chiselled me thus
Embrace my Cartier case, its velvet must
Be enthralled with all the lives I’ve traced
Applaud the filmic broads whose gowns I’ve laced
Respect the intellect of sparkling science
My sobriquet: the Taylor-Burton Diamond
MORNING ELIXIR
Electrify your sluggish mind with black
Elixir bitter— swirling steam’s attack
on sluggish thinking. Fill your tiny cup
and energize your neurons. Level up.
Blow for cool, then dip me back and drink,
I wake you and upgrade the thoughts you think.
Your concentration is my gift bestowed.
Now, rise and grind my beans. I’m espresso.
FROM DREAMS YOU KNOW MY HALLS
I am the widened space that speaks of naught.
My columns—tilted pines—my mats, your walking
feet upon the forest floor unyielding.
Your camera scribes the silver shadows fleeting.
My dangling boughs, grey pipes, my curling leaf—
abandoned furniture. Your presence: brief.
You interrupt my silences to pry—
I give up nothing. Structures, too, can lie
awake at unclocked hours, knowing nil.
My river—moulding carpet, nest—these sills
of windows rimed in plaque without excuse.
Here, clouds collect so you cannot peek through.
From dreams, you know my halls. I shan’t explain
my provenance. I’m liminal. My lanes—
a shuttered wood around a witch’s hut.
I’m liminal. My gates are always shut.
HMS EREBUS
Who are you to seek me—
you, who have never crunched ice like hardtack
you, without rot, mast or muster.
You think you can desecrate my ribcage,
trampling in cold shock at my collapse,
slicing the sea-rot from my dreads?
Disturbing my bones with bubbles, extinguishing
the darkness I chose?
Yes, I chose it.
A candy trail from brass buttons to bleached bodies
misled you with missives slit between the stones that knew me.
And still do.
A cairn is not a conscience. How
I rewrote your map in my mordant image: Starvation Cove.
Don’t think the sunken shell
of me can’t wield a spoon greased in blubber;
Crack open one scurvid tin
and find out just how many mouths
a bay can have.
My warning is your invitation.
Oh, to starve again—I dare you.
LANI BURSHTEIN is a schoolteacher, artist and writer living in Toronto. Her poetic interests include disaster, history, visual arts, opulence, childhood and constructed identities