“ ‘Jackie says, “Hey, Diane let’s run off behind a shady tree

Dribble off those Bobbie Brooks, let me do what I please.’”

John Cougar Mellencamp, “Jack and Diane”

“Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes.” Henry David Thoreau

Clothes by Anne Sexton (1928-1974)

Put on a clean shirt

before you die, some Russian said.

Nothing with drool, please,

no egg spots, no blood,

no sweat, no sperm.

You want me clean, God,

so I’ll try to comply.

The hat I was married in,

will it do?

White, broad, fake flowers in a tiny array.

It’s old-fashioned, as stylish as a bedbug,

but is suits to die in something nostalgic.

And I’ll take

my painting shirt

washed over and over of course

spotted with every yellow kitchen I’ve painted.

God, you don’t mind if I bring all my kitchens?

They hold the family laughter and the soup.

For a bra

(need we mention it?),

the padded black one that my lover demeaned

when I took it off.

He said, “Where’d it all go?”

And I’ll take

the maternity skirt of my ninth month,

a window for the love-belly

that let each baby pop out like and apple,

the water breaking in the restaurant,

making a noisy house I’d like to die in.

For underpants I’ll pick white cotton,

the briefs of my childhood,

for it was my mother’s dictum

that nice girls wore only white cotton.

If my mother had lived to see it

she would have put a WANTED sign up in the post office

for the black, the red, the blue I’ve worn.

Still, it would be perfectly fine with me

to die like a nice girl

smelling of Clorox and Duz.

Being sixteen-in-the-pants

I would die full of questions.

Exchanging Hats by Elizabeth Bishop (1911-1979)

Unfunny uncles who insist

in trying on a lady’s hat,

--oh, even if the joke falls flat,

we share your slight transvestite twist

in spite of our embarrassment.

Costume and custom are complex.

The headgear of the other sex

inspires us to experiment.

Anandrous aunts, who, at the beach

with paper plates upon your laps,

keep putting on the yachtsmen’s caps

with exhibitionistic screech,

the visors hanging o’er the ear

so that the golden anchors drag,

--the tides of fashion never lag.

Such caps may not be worn next year.

Or you who don the paper plate

itself, and put some grapes upon it,

or sport the Indian’s feather bonnet,

--perversities may aggravate

the natural madness of the hatter.

And if the opera hats collapse

and crowns grow draughty, then, perhaps,

he thinks what might a miter matter?

Unfunny uncle, you who wore a

hat too big, or one too many,

tell us, can’t you, are there any

stars inside your black fedora?

Aunt exemplary and slim,

with avernal eyes, we wonder

what slow changes they see under

their vast, shady, turned-down brim.

Man in the Long Black Coat by Bob Dylan (born 1941)

Crickets are chirpin’, the water is high,

There’s a soft cotton dress on the line hangin’ dry,

Window wide open, African trees

Bent over backwards from a hurricane breeze.

Not a word of goodbye, note even a note,

She gone with the man

In the long black coat.

Somebody seen him hanging around

At the old dance hall on the outskirts of town,

He looked into her eyes when she stopped to ask

If he wanted to dance, he had a face like a mask.

Somebody said from the Bible he’d quote

There was dust on the man

In the long black coat.

Preacher was a talkin’ there’s a sermon he gave,

He said every man’s conscience is vile and depraved,

You cannot depend on it to be your guide

When it’s you who must keep it satisfied.

It ain’t easy to swallow, it sticks in the throat,

She gave her heart to the man

In the long black coat.

There are no mistakes in life some people say

It is true sometimes you can see it that way.

Bridge: But people don’t live or die, people just float.

She went with the man

In the long black coat.

There’s smoke on the water, it’s been there since June,

Tree trunks uprooted, ‘neath the high crescent moon

Feel the pulse and vibration and the rumbling force

Somebody is out there beating the dead horse.

She never said nothing there was nothing she wrote,

She gone with the man

In the long black coat.

Notice by Steve Kowit (born 1938)

This evening, the sturdy Levi’s

I wore every day for over a year

& which seemed to the end

in perfect condition,

suddenly tore.

How or why I don’t know,

but there it was: a big rip at the crotch.

A month ago my friend Nick

walked off a racquetball court,

showered,

got into this street clothes,

& halfway home collapsed & died.

Take heed, you who read this,

& drop to your knees now & again

like the poet Christopher Smart,

& kiss the earth & be joyful,

& make much of your time,

& be kindly to everyone,

even to those who do not deserve it.

For although you may not believe

it will happen,

you too will one day be gone,

I, whose Levi’s ripped at the crotch

for no reason,

assure you that such is the case.

Pass it on.

The Suits by Moniza Alvi (born 1954)

My father’s forties suit, bought when he first came to England,

pin-striped with broad lapels, comfortingly chocolate, but crisp.

He and his Pakistani friends and their we-have-arrived-suits.

In a black-and-white snap, Dad sits on the grass at a rural crossroads,

head in his hands, signs pointing in all directions: Digswell, Welwyn,

Tewin Wood ... Even here, deep in the countryside, he’s wearing

his suit. He’s handsome as a doctor, our neighbour said.

My father and his friends, marvelled at wherever they went, ordering

a sandwich at the Comet Hotel, or shopping on the Barnet by-pass.

This was before Go back home! Their suits of armour

could have stood up without them. Walked on and on.

The Voice by Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)

Woman much missed, how you call to me, call to me,

Saying that now you are not as you were

When you had changed from the one who was all to me,

But as at first, when our day was fair.

Can it be you that I hear? Let me view you, then,

Standing as when I drew near to the town

Where you would wait for me: yes, as I knew you then,

Even to the original air-blue gown!

Or is it only the breeze in its listlessness

Travelling across the wet mead to me here,

You being ever dissolved to wan wistlessness,

Heard no more again far or near?

Thus I; faltering forward,

Leaves around me falling,

Wind oozing thin through the thorn from norward,

And the woman calling.

Upon Julia’s Clothes by Robert Herrick (1591-1674)

WHENAS in silks my Julia goes,

Then, then, methinks, how sweetly flows

That liquefaction of her clothes.

Next, when I cast mine eyes and see

That brave vibration each way free;

O how that glittering taketh me!

Coats by Jane Kenyon (1947-1995)

I saw him leaving the hospital

with a woman’s coat over his arm.

Clearly she would not need it.

The sunglasses he wore could not

conceal his wet face, his bafflement.

As if in mockery the day was fair,

and the air mild for December. All the same

he had zipped his own coat and tied

the hood under his chin, preparing

for irremediable cold.

My Shoes by Charles Simic (born 1938)

Shoes, secret face of my inner life:

Two gaping toothless mouths,

Two partly decomposed animal skins

Smelling of mice nests.

My brother and sister who died at birth

Continuing their existence in you,

Guiding my life

Toward their incomprehensible innocence.

What use are books to me

When in you it is possible to read

The Gospel of my life on earth

And still beyond, of things to come?

I want to proclaim the religion

I have devised for your perfect humility

And the strange church I am building

With you as the altar.

Ascetic and maternal, you endure:

Kin to oxen, to Saints, to condemned men,

With your mute patience, forming

The only true likeness of myself.

The Pattern by Michael Longley (born 1939)

Thirty-six years, to the day, after our wedding

When a cold figure-revealing wind blew against you

And lifted your veil, I find in its fat envelope

The six-shilling Vogue patern for your bride’s dress,

Complicated instructions for stitching bodice

And skirt, box pleats and hems, tissue-paper outlines,

Semblances of skin which I nervously unfold

And hold up in snow-light, for snow has been falling

On this windless day, and I glimpse your wedding dress

And white shoes outside in the transformed garden

Where the clothes-line and every twig have been covered.

Wardrobe Lady by Peter Redgrove (1932-2003)

She wears the long series of wonder-awakening dresses,

She wears the fish-skin cloak,

She wears the gown of pearl with the constellations slashed into its dark lining,

She undresses out of the night sky, each night of the year a different sky,

She wears altitude dresses and vertigo dresses,

She plucks open the long staircase at the neck with the big buttons of bird skulls in the white dress of sow-thistle,

She has leather britches known to be chimp-skin,

She has combed star-rays into a shaggy night-dress,

She has a bodice of bone-flounces, a turbinal blouse through which the air pours,

There is a gown she has that shimmers without slit or seam like the wall of an aquarium:

A starfish moves slowly on its pumps across her bosom,

A shark glides, a turtle rows silently between her knees,

And she adopts in turn the long dress of sewn louse-skin,

The romper suit of purple jam packed with tiny oval seeds,

The foggy grey dress, and lapping between its folds

Echo bird-cries and meteor noises and declarations of love,

The ball gown of ticker-tape,

The evening dress of flexible swirling clockwork running against time,

The cocktail dress of bloody smoke and bullet -torn bandages,

And the little black dress of gravel-soil that rends and seals as she turns.

Often she sits up all night in the philosopher’s library

Sewing strong patches from his wardrobes of thought

Into her wounded dresses.

Woman With Girdle by Anne Sexton (1928–1974)

Your midriff sags toward your knees;

your breasts lie down in air,

their nipples as uninvolved

as warm starfish.

You stand in your elastic case,

still not giving up the new-born

and the old-born cycle.

Moving, you roll down the garment,

down that pink snapper and hoarder,

as your belly, soft as pudding,

slops into the empty space;

down, over the surgeon’s careful mark,

down over hips, those head cushions

and mouth cushions,

slow motion like a rolling pin,

over crisp hairs, that amazing field

that hides your genius from your patron;

over thighs, thick as young pigs,

over knees like saucers,

over calves, polished as leather,

down toward the feet.

You pause for a moment,

tying your ankles into knots.

Now you rise,

a city from the sea,

born long before Alexandria was,

straighway from God you have come

into your redeeming skin.

http://girdlezone.org/literatu.htm

After My Arrest by Judith Clark (born 1949 [maybe]; member, Weatherman Underground)

among the everyday

pieces lost

a bright pink Indian cotton shirt

worn through months of

nursing, quickly unbuttoned

to bring the rooting baby to my breast

her head in its

soft, filmy folds

set adrift among the debris

of police searches, overturned lives

tossed into a pile of orphaned clothes

and taken to a tag sale

where my friend,

recognizing it,

bought it

to keep me close

and wore it one day

to bring my daughter for a visit,

greeting me cheerfully,

“Remember this?”

and I laughed,

scooping up my baby

to carry her into the toy-filled playroom

where she rode me, her horsey

among the oversized stuffed animals

until visiting hours were over

when I stood at that great divide,

the visitor’s exit gate,

and watched my shirt and my child

leave

with my friend

from The New Yorker, February 24 & March 3, 1997, page 124

My Short Skirt by Eve Ensler (born 1953)

My short skirt
is not an invitation
a provocation
an indication
that I want it
or give it
or that I hook.
My short skirt
is not begging for it
it does not want you
to rip it off me
or pull it down.
My short skirt
is not a legal reason
for raping me
although it has been before
it will not hold up
in the new court.
My short skirt, believe it or not
has nothing to do with you.
My short skirt
is about discovering
the power of my lower calves
about cool autumn air traveling
up my inner thighs
about allowing everything I see
or pass or feel to live inside.
My short skirt is not proof
that I am stupid
or undecided
or a malleable little girl.
My short skirt is my defiance
I will not let you make me afraid
My short skirt is not showing off
this is who I am
before you made me cover it
or tone it down.
Get used to it.
My short skirt is happiness
I can feel myself on the ground.
I am here. I am hot.
My short skirt is a liberation
flag in the women’s army
I declare these streets, any streets
my vagina’s country.
My short skirt
is turquoise water
with swimming colored fish
a summer festival
in the starry dark
a bird calling
a train arriving in a foreign town
my short skirt is a wild spin
a full breath
a tango dip
my short skirt is
initiation
appreciation
excitation.
But mainly my short skirt
and everything under it
is Mine.
Mine.
Mine.


(from The Vagina Monologues)

Emperor’s New Clothes

Little Red Riding Hood