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Portrait of My Sister About to Shoplift

Portrait of My Sister About to Shoplift

by Chelsea Wagenaar

Shes not the glossy tubes of mascara,
their hidden wands bristled & blacked.

Shes not the crate of pomegranates: this is
no still life. Everyone already knows

what the inside of a womans body looks like.

Shes not the mugshot that will run in tomorrows paper,
her shaded eyes inscrutable with the after.

Shes not the aisle of bulbs, boxed like eggshell nimbuses.
Would they suffice to light the distance

between us, a constellation of years? Shes turning
down the fishing aisle. Shes touching the flies & lures,

stringing their names like garlands (Sepia Nymph,
Mallard & Claret) around her evergreen silence

(Breathalyzer. Black Ghost). The poles assemble before her
like grand rosined horsehair bows

and she is Alice down the rabbit hole, undersized.
Willing to drink anything if it means shell change.

She chooses one. In her mind, a clear brook passes
over stones older than her oldest memory.

Minnows school & shimmer between cloud shadow.
She walks down the aisle the way women

always have, quietly, slowly, as everything
before & after disappears into fluorescence.


With Portrait of My Sister About to Shoplift, I started out feeling some loyalty to a person, to an experiential truth, but I needed to write my way into loyalty to the poem itself. After many drafts, I decided on portraiture as my avenue, in part because I wanted to write against the permanence of a mugshot (that most damning portrait), of shoplifting on a persons criminal record, and instead freeze the moment just before, the moment of the decision as its forming. I didnt want to craft backstory or context, which are more customary ways of humanizing the wrongdoer. Im interested in that moment when the bird sings very close / to the music of what happens (from Seamus Heaneys poem Song). Portraiture as the act of description itselfthe rigorous, painstaking, attentive kindcan lead to revelation. For me, the last three lines were revelatory, with the double resonance of walking down the aisle as the girl carries her chosen, shoplifted objectthe fishing poleaway from everything before but not quite to everything yet to come. For a moment, shes preserved in the transitory.


Chelsea Wagenaar is the author of two collections of poetry, most recentlyThe Spinning Place, winner of the 2018 Michael Waters Poetry Prize. Her first collection, Mercy Spurs the Bone, was selected by Philip Levine to win the 2013Philip Levine Prize. She holds degrees from the University of Virginia and theUniversity of North Texas, and currently teaches in North Carolina. Recent workappears or is forthcoming in The Cincinnati Review and The Massachusetts Review.

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