Chagall Remembers
My Chagall is not an original.
It is a print.
Which we found together,
my lover and I,
in Warsaw, Poland.
Bought from an actor
at a Jewish theater
who rolled it up in a rubber band and took
my slote with a smile.
It has a woman’s face
that peers out at you,
studies you,
long and dark and sad.
A colorful farm scene beyond
and signature figures fly through the air
all wrapped up inside a red chicken with blue around the borders.
I love my Chagall
because it reminds me
of our travels together
in those early days --
hand in hand
arm in arm
our interest in one another acute.
He threatens some days
to take it down
off the wall,
claiming fatigue
wanting something new
for our bedroom --
shared now --
not rented for the week.
“No,” I protest,
“Never.”
“It’s not even a real Chagall,” he argues.
Breaking off another piece of me.