Villain
In a long line of villains
The poem asks
How immaterial
Is each act of perfidy
Shouldn’t one instead stamp
The whole crate
Hazardous waste
Flammable old cans
Thrown down the balcony
Rocking on your heels you fall
To thinking about the day
You crossed your heart
At Chene Park to say the Pledge
Facing the flag with 1,200 other brides
Strange to think of it as last century
As if installing air quotes
Around certain words
Made them any less ancient
Come
Across a framework
For understanding
What goes with the territory
We call interiority
The dreamlife of working
Class women: a little dance
We do before the mirror
Prettier doubles pour
From rafters even as
We flip a switch
And crawl down stairs
Lest we trip on marbles
Beneath which the fable
Ends: someday my prince …
Antidote
In the infinite game that death plays
We pass every barrier every last shroud
It fingers like a mad seamstress
Shattering her dummy, weary of the repetition
She endures when the straps tighten
Meanwhile invisible details swim ashore
In advance of our bodies’ intimate knowledge
A last chance to turn the tide that begins
The voyage home
—For Peter Gizzi
Chris Tysh is a poet whose latest publications are Hotel des Archives: A Trilogy (Station Hill Press, 2018) and Derrida’s In/Voice (BlazeVOX 2020). She holds fellowships from The National Endowment for the Arts and The Kresge Foundation, as well as a Murray Jackson Creative Scholar in the Arts Award from Wayne State University where she teaches writing. She is the poetry editor of Three Fold, an independent arts quarterly,