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      November 9, 2024Our Waitress’s Marvelous LegsGrace Bauer

      Grace Bauer

      OUR WAITRESS’S MARVELOUS LEGS

      It’s men I’m prone to eye, but when she comes
      to take our order, I’m too distracted
      to think beyond drinks, too awed
      by the ink that garments her limbs
      to consider appetizers, much less entrees.
       
      It’s not polite to stare, I know,
      but the fact of her invites it.
      Why else the filigreed ankles,
      those Peter Max planets orbiting her
      left shin, that Botticelli angel soaring
      just below her right knee?
       
      She’s a walking illustration, adorned
      to amaze, yet as seemingly nonchalant
      as the homely white-sneakered HoJo girl
      I myself once was, describing the specials
      of the day, listing our options for dressings,
      then scribbling the choices we make
      on her hand-held pad.
       
      My companion can’t help wondering how far
      up the ante goes, says he bets there’s a piercing
      or two at the end of the, so to speak, line.
      I’m more inclined to ponder motivation
      and stamina—how long and how much
      she suffered to make herself a work of art.
      For I have no doubt, she sees her own flesh
      as a kind of canvas. Her body as frame
      and wall and traveling exhibition,
      a personal statement on public display.
       
      Same could be said of the purple tights
      I wear beneath my frilly black skirt—
      too bold a choice for some people’s tastes,
      but not a permanent commitment.
      Clothes make the woman more
      than the man, despite the familiar adage,
      and body as both self and other is
      a contradiction we live with, however comfortably
      —or not—we grow into our own skins.
       
      I’ll admit part of what I feel
      is admiration, even envy.
      Whatever she may ever become
      in this world, she will never again be drab.
      She’ll wear this extravagance
      of color and form as she grays
      into more—or less—wisdom.
       
      But tonight she simply performs
      her duty as server, courteous and efficient
      as she does what she can to satisfy
      the hunger we walked in with, but not
      the hunger the sight of her
      inspires us to take home.
       

      from #36 - Winter 2011

      Grace Bauer

      “I am currently bent on surviving another winter in Nebraska, which might explain the longing for otherwise and elsewhere that keeps cropping up in my poems.”