About Me

My photo
Eleven years into widowhood, after one year of incredible happiness and nearly 14 years of single blessedness. Retired, and mostly enjoying it. Still knitting. [Zen]tangling.again after a brief hiatus.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

The Death of the Good Housekeeping Fairy

The poem came first:



Montage: The Good Housekeeping Fairy

She will be flitting nowhere, this fairy;
I found her lying dead on my desk,
crushed by a tower of books that toppled.
For her, my little stack of knowledge
was a dangerous thing, indeed.

I softened her crumpled wings with my breath,
smoothing them flat between my palms,
afraid of tearing them with my fingers.

I pickled her in formaldehyde,
worried that a simple brine solution
might make her silken skin bumpy,
or green as a gherkin. She is pinned
like a butterfly in a box,
a fairy under glass, safe from mice
and the tiptoeing feet of silverfish.

Surrounded by symbols
of a homemaker’s life, she stands
entombed in a shadowbox down the hall,
a sentinel in death
over our mutual dream of order.

I salute her as I pass from book
to vacuum to iron to watering can.
A bushel of fairies
could not bring order to this place.

I am overwhelmed, not likely
to find more aid from that quarter:
unlucky woman, destroyer of fairies.
© 1999, [Lynn]

The collage came later. Note the profusion of magazines, the incoming packages from my first throes of online shopping; the gardening tools that mocked my black thumb; the sewing paraphernalia strewn about; the neglected mop, bucket and broom.



I made two dozen or more of these fairies when that movie came out in the late 90’s about the two little girls in England who claimed to have seen real fairies. We put my fairies in the candy displays at the movie theatre where I was working. When the movie moved on to the discount houses, I got to bring my fairies home. This one got X’s for eyes and a T-pin through her torso.

No real fairies were harmed in the making of this collage…

2 comments:

Jo at Celtic Memory Yarns said...

That is a lovely poem, Lynn. And it gets your point across so well! I don't think the Good Housekeeping Fairy even tried to get into my house - she knew a no-hoper when she saw one, I guess.

There are more important things in life than getting your home spick and span. You'll only have to do it all over again soon, so why do it twice?

Keep knitting, girl! That's the way to go.

Anonymous said...

Lynn, have you submitted that poem to any magazine? I can so relate! And I even like fairies. You can ask my daughter who used to receive tiny handwritten notes from the toothfairy. Sadly, I have never been visited by the housekeeping fairy, though I believe my daughter has. :-)


(P.S.) How are your toes doing? The packing/moving?