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Atsuro Riley's work has appeared in Poetry and the Threepenny Review. He is the recipient of Poetry's 2004 Howard J. and Barbara M.J. Wood Prize.

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Diorama
by Atsuro Riley

The Blue Hole Summer Fair, set up and spread out like a butterfly pinned down on paper. Twin bright-lit wings, identically shaped (and fenced) and sized.

This side holds the waffled-tin (and oven-hot) huts of the Home Arts Booths and Contests, the hay-sweet display-cages for the 4-H livestock, the streamer-hung display-stages where girl-beauties twirl and try for queen. There's rosette-luster (and -lusting), and the marching band wearing a hole in Sousa. And (pursed) gaggles and clutches of feather-white neighbor-women, eyeballing us like we're pig's feet in a jar.
           I wonder does her boy talk Chinese?
                   You ever seen that kind of black-headed?
                           Blue shine all in it like a crow.


This other wing (the one I'm back-sneaking, side-slipping, turnstiling into) dips and slopes down to low-lying marsh-mire: whiffs of pluff-mud stink and live gnat-pack poison, carnie-cots and -trailers camped on ooze. They've got (rickety) rides, and tent-shows with stains, and rackety bare-bulbed stalls of Hoop-La Game (ring-a-coke!) and Rebel Yell and Shoot the Gook Down. Stand here, on this smutch-spot: don't these mirrors show you strange?

Crowds are gathering. Yonder there and down, the yolk-glow of a tent is drawing men on (and in) the way a car-crash does, or a cockfight sure enough, or neon. The ticket-boy's getting mobbed at the fly of the door.
    No sign in sight, except for the X of the Dixie-flag ironed across his t-shirt.
    I am bone-broke but falling into line.
    The men upwind of me are leaking chaw-spit and pennies.
    That, plus the eye-hunger spreading like a rumor through the swarm.
    The rib-skinny doorkeeper's hollering: bet now, bout's bout startin!
    Over his shoulder, a ropy yellow light.
    Also: circles of white tobacco-smoke, and bleacher-rows of (cooncalling) men who know my daddy.
    And there he is, up in front with some tall man, iron-arming two black-chested boys toward the ring.

 
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