Allegory Of The Supermarket
By Stephanie Brown
Procession of death,
Day-glo death,
Potato death,
Death of strawberry,
Death strapped into a handi-six-pack
Death in vodka, scotch, the vitamin-fortified cigarette cough.
Juice of cow in a box,
Broccoli piled up man-felled trees
How long have I been in here?
Our faces look left, right, slow, so slow, so sleepy
We reach for the non-fat,
The boxes of breadsticks, the round glue of pregnancy.
No one ever says, really, anything.
Plastic bags from the roll rippp
Let’s grab a lettuce from the stacks of lettuce,
Bee in the bonnet on the label of the jar of honey,
Darling: the non-world-yellow cheese,
the price,
the size chosen by a stranger’s desire,
for my teeth.
Box of food for the pet at home, standing in our kitchen.
The shelves of canned fruit, yellow bullets of mustard jars
The piles of onions, the dusty garlic piles,
The triangular figure of tomatoes,
The baskets we lay our deaths down in
Fetching cans of halos.
Cry into your toliet paper,
your spray starch.
your light bulbs and lobsters in tanks near the cashier’s booth
their claws held together by rubber bands
Cry into that water
Fish belly up on the Styrofoam surfaces
in refrigeration
headless feetless chickens
Turkeys across the aisle, lookalike big bodies, frozen.
Shelves of bread loaves like big leather shows of sad old clerks
not like
the smell of yeast and life’s
an open wound, festering, and a feast of fools.
No dignity, my darling,
in these last three hours of the world.