Tianya Antiques City, Beijing, China
Image source: Sina
A strangest thing indeed:
round dishes on the roof;
the visitors, like ants,
all enter/leave the feast…
Escalators deceptively slow,
quicken
pace
excitedly as the shop-front
store owners
come to life as
visitors step upon their
domain
Smoke
fills the halls;
NO SMOKING sings
not to be seen
here
Teenagers,
arrogant old
women, and
what appear to be
street urchins also
man these
gates;
well-dressed,
well-versed
suited middle-aged
men and women, and the
exotic, distrustful
eyes of the
Uyghur:
Children eat rice
at the lacquer tables
as their parents
haggle
or discover yet another
childhood
acquaintance –
Some halls are filled
with more
idle
smoke
than others…
At the busiest:
count the tiny
diamonds
lining the precious
green jade
leaflets, glistening in
the
caged
light;
semiprecious stones
set in
much-handled
wedding bands –
How can we know
each
detail?
Each fold of
each leaf?
The grandiose:
purple cut agate a
basketball-player
tall;
jade and marble
slates,
cute in with
intricate tree-leaves,
lined with detailed lines and
anatomically impossible
people larger than the
pagodas on the
shining, speckled,
lithe green
mountains
Tea sets of
smooth
clay of
subtly different shades
of roam chocolate
and caramel feel
sandy to the
touch;
gold Bodhisattvas and
Buddhas line
shelves;
antique, or
not
Fragrant medicinal
wood,
cut
into
small
squares,
promise remedies:
Impossibly smoothed wood
create chairs
exquisitely painful
to sit
upon
(no wonder the
Emperors had
such bad
headaches)
People-sized plates
still sprinkle the
building top like
ribbons, red and
gleaming like a
kindergartner’s
First Day present;
gilt, the buttons
noon read, sprinkled
on the silver
elevators…
No comments:
Post a Comment
One Art, to recognize, must be,
Another Art to Praise.
- Emily Dickinson