Female flesh
Dissolving into artichokes
Exploding stars
Snowflakes
And the expanding leaves of water lilies
At the top left hand comer of a dark screen
A Latin American tenor
In cameo cut out sings
“Brazil”
Moving round the frame
And across a diagonal
Series of bamboo canes
Over
The S.S. Brazil
Arriving in New York Harbor
Passengers bustle down the gangway
Organ grinders’ monkeys crawl through
Artificial palm trees
At the Club New Yorker
Across a tropical island
Set
Covered in yellow clad girls who whirl
Giant bananas
Or tum them
Into a banana xylophone
Carmen Miranda
On top of a wagon
In a hat and corsage
Of bananas and strawberries
Five feet high
With a cornucopia of bananas
Sprouting from her head
As far as the eye can see
A child
Wears a metal sleeve
Electrically illuminated
Which dissolves into a succession of
Metal hoops
Glowing brilliantly
As they wind away into
A pitch dark screen
Accompanied by a sumptuous and exotic
Arrangement for strings
Girls
In mauve leotards
Swing the hoops
Above their heads
In an effect of extraordinary daring and beauty
Others slowly revolve
Polka dots
Like gambling counters
Pink green mauve white
As the figure of
A blue skirted girl is split
Into four
Refracted
Again and again
As in the splintered image of a kaleidoscope
Amber and gold
Snow drop and clover leaf
The color in its wacky patterns
Achieves something of the intensity
Described by Huxley
Under mescaline
Finally the cast emerge
From the center of the kaleidoscope
Singing
“A Journey To A Star”
Until the whole screen bubbles
With tiny heads
Sharon Olds
The I is Made of Paper
The Pulitzer Prize–winning poet Sharon Olds discusses sex, religion, and writing poems that “women were definitely not supposed to write,” in an excerpt from her Art of Poetry interview with Jessica Laser. Olds also reads three of her poems: “Sisters of Sexual Treasure” (issue no. 74, Fall–Winter 1978), “True Love,” and “The Easel.”
This episode was produced and sound-designed by John DeLore. The audio recording of “Sisters of Sexual Treasure” is courtesy of the Woodberry Poetry Room, Harvard University.
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