Alison Jarvis

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What I didn’t expect was the cold

the first, and what was the last summer

we lived in Paris. The apartment in the eighth

you thought might be too grand was pure

opera—its tiny rooms; the fireplaces

that needed fuel all June and July.

And how could I have expected you to move

through that summer on your own two feet?

Once, I read that longing, as a sickness of the heart

is endless, incurable. In my story

you will always walk, you will always

play quartets, you will never be sick

and you will never really die

                                                  How did I manage

in my bad French, to rent a wheelchair?

When you had heartburn from all the pills you took

I asked that pharmacy to send us something

for a “fire in the heart.”

 

Whatever the French celebrated that frozen summer,

it didn’t matter, I was there layered

in unserious sweaters. On Bastille Day for the fireworks

at Trocadero, I wore three pairs of cotton socks and scarves

pulled around my neck, my breath in front of me.

I was wild to dance

at each Bastille Ball, in every firehouse,

in every quarter, stunned by wine,

no mind, no body.

 

Sometimes I used to think of us

as two parts of that huge stone sculpture

out in front of St-Eustache: You, the poised,

recumbent head, and me, the enormous hand,

a finger reaching for the sleeping cheek, longing

to stroke the body back . . .l ’ Ecoute

it was called, the whorled ear

big enough for crawling into, cocked

 

to hear the whole world turning.

 

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