Mathew Brady Arranging the Bodies
By Mary Ruefle
On a mountain flat with snow
 a blue cloud
 paints a last touch of life.
 There’s endless harm in trying
 a dead body on for size.
 The gentleman stands out
 in every detail, except color.
 He considers his life of a madness
 that breaks unexpected
 (one boy had a sweetheart
 he wore her hair round his finger
 it kept it from falling off
 with the rest)
 or comes also if he composes it
 (lift one eye shut, put
 rifle butt in the slack jaw
 of soldiers decomposing).
 He fell in love like a woman
 in the folded arms
 of a drying sweater:
 touched one shoulder
 and a whole platoon
 was affixed with smiles.
 Teeth already loose
 falling from their envelopes
 thick folded letters
 in a dead white mist.
Copyright Credit: Mary Ruefle, “Mathew Brady Arranging the Bodies” from memling’s veil, University of Alabama Press. Copyright © 1982 by Mary Ruefle. Reprinted by permission of the author.
Source: memling’s veil (The University of Alabama Press, 1982)


