THE MARRIAGE BED

Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee around a Pomegranate a Second before Awakening

—Salvador Dali

That he painted her suspended above a rock—his wife,

asleep, naked, after biting a pomegranate, seeds spit

into ocean. That the bee, before a sting, craves the sweet

suck and sip of Venus-fruit. That the artist, straight-backed

in bony armchair, would doze, heavy key between thumb

and forefinger. That the clatter of metal hitting the tin plate beneath

his hand, wakes him up: a Capuchin monk technique. That she

does not tumble into the sea, his muse, afloat, scumbled there.

But when Miro pictures his wife in Woman Dreaming

of Escape, one eye is open wide while a ladder hovers, cross-hatched,

above her head. That this wife has no exit. That the orb

disgorges the red snapper which spews out two

tigers with bayonet about to jab the under-flesh

of her arm. That I forgot to mention the elephant on spider-stilts

balancing an obelisk on back. The artist etched the sky

by noon, the backdrop after six p.m. That in the Thyssen,

when I was late, racing past Picasso and Chagall,

Dali bellowed, arresting my step. I lost

sight of my husband on the mezzanine. That Gala

is stung. That Pilar takes flight. That sleeping

women interrupt their spouses’ canvases.