Mirror
Her large grey eyes, widening
her red mouth, a
perfect rosebud, opening—
gold tints rippling throughout her auburn hair
restrained beneath a
demure Puritan cap; Her
own beauty was the forbidden
Fruit of Knowledge
because her parents were loath to witness the viper of vanity slither into her
innocent heart. No mirrors were permitted in their cottage, nor other
reflecting surfaces. She was
tasked with scouring the pewter plates that reflected
nothing, but the grey sullen dawn. After all,
she was told that if she saw her own face,
she would die. She
gathered wild roses to press their withering
petals between secret book covers,
gazing into brooks whose surface images rippled away—
into the foaming oblivion of rapids smoothing stones,
soothing naiads. Blood
red moon months crept on—stones beneath the brook’s
dull surface fuzzy with moss—the sepia bookmarks of wild roses falling
from their correct places till tombstones loomed before her—
the bones of her mother and father crumbled
beneath the hard soil, while she kept scouring the pewter plates, her
arms sinking into grey suds, and the backside of spoons reflecting back
her ballooning head, a silly skull.
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