July Issue: Still Life

Camera Obscura

My childhood is trapped in a thick jelly 
of feelings I’ve tried to label.
I was petrified in front of the elephant and the tiger 

When she told me the hole in the plastic animal’s armour 
was for a thing called ‘mercy’. I found myself 
frozen, terrified of the word big

of the gap between the museum stairs 
threatening to suck me up, swirling like the sinkhole
in the bath. Or the pinhole in my old shoe box:

the relic of homework, a handmade camera obscura 
that could trap surroundings (or really just reflect them). 
I could never quite comprehend the way we see everything 

upside down. Like the great distortion that occurred
somewhere on the top floor, looking at all that malleable 
below-ness. On the stairs again I found myself

trapped in a paradox, terrified I’d never be big.
Looking up at statues, perpetually still lives
that can wobble a confectionary perspective.

Wishing they’d bend down when no one was looking
and whisper something just for me: don’t worry about the tiger’s mouth
or holes in armour or the sun that might not come in the morning.

Mercy comes as a gentle promise that someday, we can all be Gods.

Jane, 19, UK.

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The Café Society is an online magazine featuring original prompts which focus on the mind and the work of the artist. All works submitted come together at the end of the month to construct a catalogue of creations.

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