An Oracle

Choke off the wineskin’s spout is what Apollo’s oracle

tells Aegeus, king of Athens, when he goes looking

to cure his infertility, which was not the same advice

my neighbor Agnes O’Neill offered me

as I sat in her living room, watching her nurse her son,

who was nearly three, pushing his boy head

against her breasts that were flattened, come to think of it,

like wineskins. His knees pedaled her thighs

as he sucked and foraged, and an eye oculated the room

like the ego’s manic periscope marking what was his from hers

and scrutinizing me as if I were foreign matter,

social debris navigated with cries and squirms,

while the TV shed its blare of light and sound.

And then like the casual, misdirected oracle I deserved,

she asked if I wore briefs or boxers

and before I could answer, she said, “Boxers,

that’ll keep ’em loose and cool.”

And that was all she said, all she needed to say,

as she shifted her angel child to her other breast

when he began to fuss.