
MADELEINE SCOTT
DOCTOR DOCTOR
“Doctor doctor,” said Madeleine, “I stab I stab the silhouettes
of woman artist, intellectual,
to link the sentence chain together to cut open the first fig.
Modafinil, Bupropion,
Risperidone, Alprazolam.
My eyes blink open like a doll’s.
My sewing needle, ballpoint pen.
Cannot. Being beautiful save you they would burn
they asked for more and dormant scent
of three-day corpse surfeit
of wills yet only one, can you move it like
a hand,
can you hear the women carmine, a disaster, dragged from bed to divan,
from Turkish carpet
to Town Square.
Nausea. Sign your name there…
How long can I stay in the hollow of your arms
the men are sick sick
I pay again and again for my prescriptions just once electro convulsion
in the prism-light syringe. Quiet. A room of my own.
Desire Desire how could it
not be gaping lack Empty the word
spake the breath raised
the backbend the backbend
intercom-fuzzed voice warping
backwards in a loop.
Doctor doctor, I cried in the passenger seat.
Doctor doctor, I do it just to make you mad.
So many women cannot open our
own organs
at the window I said it, I said it before, I will write until
Faith in things invisible. Beauty determinedly libidinal.
Gloss of hair eyes antipsychotic.
No reason no reason God’s will God’s will God’s essence.
Too heavy to be lifted I come crawling to my mother.
I try for fantasy I could fit my pair of scissors, ballpoint pen.
Modafinil, Bupropion,
Risperidone, Alprazolam.
(Lexapro, Prozac,
there were others, I forget.)
Dull, dull, tile floors and walls glass-paneled.
Death of clever speak the speech. Jesus saves I buy I want it.”
––––
DOCTOR DOCTOR REVISITED
“I was being told to drink more milk.
Was being told about my symptoms.
Hysteric wink.
My knot of bedsheets.
Lines drawn across my body,
incision at my breastbone,
the bruising of my nose.
Doctor doctor: speech
assignments—
your words like empty—
like pretty scapegoat—
and glass cut through by window-bars—
Doctor doctor: waves of nausea
shall I call you after dinner
shall I call you from the mall.
I don’t have any sisters
words you said about my jaw.
One to take and take again
what could I know if not your hands
Doctor doctor:
my hair splayed over back of couch
when I knelt on fraying carpet
when I fit it in my mouth.
Each word comes out and then the next
I stood onstage the houselights down
I sound your name I spit I spit
I speak again
I found the larvae—wet-weighed wings
in bedsheets in bedsheets
in Valenciennes lace
and bars across my window—
Doctor doctor—down the aisle—
approaching pit of empty
O glass slippers for the bride.
Under plate glass—
a heat lamp—
a calcium pill—
something to sleep—
Doctor doctor tell the stories
I walk the path with script
engraven I trip
on hem lengths
speak I speak.”
––––
HEARTLAND
“The heartland of my childhood,”
Madeleine said,
“was the Hello Kitty abortion clinic
my front teeth broken I don’t mind I’d never felt more beautiful than
when the construction worker said I’d never get hit by a car charm
to look good in a bikini I didn’t mean to open the door to watch
pornography so late at night to try on the pink lipstick to slide
the gun in my bra God... what I would give for something
inside out out out some women look so good in classic rock
in the doctor’s office the dance studio under the disco ball the neon
sign for the psychic I saw I didn’t mean to they told mom and dad
they said they’d keep the door open he sat himself beside me he said he
was much older a stack of cash God... he was so short...
some women one after the next Aqua Netting their blue eyeshadow
ingrown hair in the crease pressing the plastic smoothness
holding yourself so urgently hiding the glow of the poison irregular flow
six-fingered the male kind desolate in fishnet in hard broken pink I spun
the bottle it was her heat,”
Madeleine said,
“I kissed.”
––––
Madeleine Scott is a doctoral student at Harvard working on gender, psychoanalysis, and the history of Christianity.