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Juan Felipe Herrera’s ‘Inside the Jacket’

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I remember, many years ago

a mexicano working in a sweat shop

on E Street by the library.

I could see him through the window —

a tailor by trade.

Thought about asking him

to make me a suit for graduation.

His fingers were so thin, so dark.

Usually, he labored on a sport coat.

Could tell the owner had granted him

privacy.

He seemed happy and at ease.

One evening, I passed by and gazed

at his finery; his project:

venom lacing

a serpent feverishly winding out of the earth

wrapping around the furniture, into the ceiling,

a gold lacing, swelling,

pouring out into the night,

an iridescent skin, leaping

out of his scarred hands,

spreading across the city.

From: “Half of the World in Light: New and Selected Poems” (The University of Arizona Press)

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