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Apples

Claire Schwartz

December 29, 2020

The townspeople paste wax apples on the trees, glow shyly out their windows as the Dictator struts past the monument of his father strutting past nothing at all. Yesterday, the Dictator dressed the Butcher’s boy in the uniform of his own son. Today, at the orders of the Dictator, guards shot the boy.

In the town of his childhood, the Curator is a tourist. He touches his mother with the language with which he does not touch his work. In the painting, bored bored Eve chomps on an apple. In the tongue of his work, he acquires her.

At the banquet: pigs choked with apples, music wrung from the townspeople’s anguish. The meat in the soup is human meat. The Dictator’s ring is made of gold yanked from the teeth of corpses.

The Censor bloats with what he knows. His sons bloom in neat rows. An orchard grows inside his wife. He prunes her on Sundays.

Under the earth, the Butcher’s boy, laughing, eats an apple. The core rises, light with rot. The Dictator admires the fruit of his land.

Claire Schwartzis the author of the forthcoming poetry collection Civil Service (Graywolf Press, 2022) and the poetry editor of Jewish Currents.


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