The Visit of the Professor of Aesthetics
To see you standing in the sagging bookstore door
 So filled me with chagrin that suddenly you seemed as
 Pink and white to me as newborn, hairless mouse. For
 I had hoped to delight you at home. Be a furl
 Of faint perfume and Vienna’s cord like lace,
 To shine my piano till a shimmer of mother-of-pearl
 Embraced it. To pleasantly surprise you with the grace
 That transcends my imitation and much worn
 “Louis XV” couch. To display my cathedrals and ballets.
 To plunge you into Africa through my nude
 Zulu Prince, my carvings from Benin, forlorn
 Treasures garnered by much sacrifice of food.
 I had hoped to delight you, for more
 Rare than the seven-year bloom of my
 Chinese spiderweb fern is a mind like yours
 That concedes my fetish for this substance
 Of your trade. And I had planned to prove
 Your views of me correct at even every chance
 Encounter. But you surprised me. And the store which
 Had shown promise until you came, arose
 Like a child gone wild when company comes or a witch
 At Hallowe’en. The floor, just swept and mopped
 Was persuaded by the northlight to deny it.
 The muddy rag floor rugs hunched and flopped
 Away from the tears in the linoleum that I wanted
 Then to hide. The drapes that I had pleated
 In clear orchid and peach feverishly flaunted
 Their greasiest folds like a banner.
 The books who had been my friends, retreated—
 Became as shy as the proverbial poet in manner
 And hid their better selves. All glow had been deleted
 By the dirt. And I felt that you whose god is grace
 Could find no semblance of it here. And unaware
 That you were scrubbing, you scrubbed your hands.
 Wrung and scrubbed your long white fingers. Scrubbed
 Then as you smiled and I lowered my eyes from despair.
                
                    
                        Notes:
                        
            
                        
                                                
                                                                    
                            From To Flower (Hemphill Press First Edition, 1963).
This work is part of the portfolio “‘These Blazing Forms’: The Life and Work of Margaret Danner” from the March 2022 issue.
                    
                        Source:
                        Poetry
                                                                                                                                                                    (March 2022)