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SPINNERET LAMENT

By Maddison O'Donnell



Oh, for Arachne’s sake, here she comes again

dark candyfloss cloud haloing her head;

Satan’s angel come to undo me.


I crouch within my octagonal palace, Sisyphean.

My nest carefully constructed yesterday, and redone

the day before  and many a day before that.


Her finger prods my thread and

as if to spite me: pesty mite, she tears

apart the spun fruit gossamer of my labours.


With one touch

the whole of it

collapses.


Oh, my aching spinneret, silk-worm organ of life!


Again, we must construct anew.


Thus, in cloistered night, I emerge to weave and tease

a home from the shredded pulp of her hand’s undoing.

I huddle into its depths, my dusk blanket

curing in mercurial moonlight. By morning it hosts

my parcelled meals among the glistening dew.


The sun rises a threat; the dread

of human destruction oozes through me.


The devil is nigh.


I leap, I crouch. I challenge and beg her

with silence seeping from all eight of my eyes.


“You have the whole world,” she observes, dark

finger hesitating at the edge of my diurnal masterpiece.

“Why must you build your web on my fucking car?”


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