A woman prepared a mouse for her husband’s dinner,
roasting it with a blueberry in its mouth.
At table he uses a dentist’s pick and a surgeon’s scalpel,
bending over the tiny roastling with a jeweler’s loupe . . .
Twenty years of this: curried mouse, garlic and butter
mouse, mouse sauteed in its own fur, Salisbury mouse,
mouse-in-the-trap, baked in the very trap that killed it,
mouse tartare, mouse poached in menstrual blood at the full
of the moon . . .
Twenty years of this, eating their way through the
mice . . . And yet, not to forget, each night, one less vermin
in the world . . .
(Russell Edson)
More Poetry from Russell Edson:
Russell Edson Poems based on Topics: Night, World- The Alfresco Moment (Russell Edson Poem)
- The Ox (Russell Edson Poem)
- The Position (Russell Edson Poem)
- The Reason Why The Closet-Man Is Never Sad (Russell Edson Poem)
- The Autopsy (Russell Edson Poem)
- A Performance At Hog Theater (Russell Edson Poem)
Readers Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: World Poems, Night PoemsBased on Keywords: eating, prepared, mouse, fur, trap, butter, mice, uses, baked, surgeon, dentist