BPR 48 | 2021
And who would want a basket 
      dripping with yolk, the viscous 
 mess of whites? What is the basket 
      made of? Woven 
 sweetgrass? Plastic threads
      from Thailand? Is it full 
 of pastel tissue paper 
      or spider webs? And what if 
 you hold some eggs 
      back, hold them in your mouth
 and swallow them whole—does 
      that mean you cannot love 
 or that you can save love 
      for everyone, including 
 yourself? What color are those eggs—
      sepia nostalgia, the speckled 
 ocean in your lover’s eyes 
      when you say 
 we need to talk? And if swallowed 
      whole, do they sit 
 like pebbles in your stomach, 
      a cairn to point you 
 in the right direction? Or do they 
      dissolve like the ones shed 
 in a woman’s blood? And to merge 
      women with eggs—is that too 
 convenient? Does this trap women 
      as vessels to fill? And what 
 to fill their baskets with besides eggs?
      Fire? And that 
 fire, who keeps it
      burning? And who 
 will I palm out 
      my flames to, the burnt shells
 I forgot to save 
      from the house fires 
 smoldering inside me?



