Ask Me and I’ll Tell You

by Annie Przypyszny


about the woman who lives

     in an open grave. She’s not

crazy. She’s versed

     in Edith Wharton, Emily Post, 

the final poems of Keats.

     Her Anne Klein dress is only

slightly soiled, only a tad moth-

     nibbled. The oak leaves

in her hair appear intentional.

     She adorns her rich brown walls

with fine art: pages from trashed 

     copies of Victoria Magazine

grubs inlaid like fat pearls, 

     a white-rose wreath she stole

from the headstone 

     of some mother’s child. 

The gravedigger and hearse driver 

     find her quite lovely.

They keep offering her

     the mausoleum, but she graciously

declines. How would she hear

    the mourners through the marble?

How would she notate each sob 

     and moan on staff paper,

blessed with perfect pitch as she is?

     She sings with a bone-chill

soprano, but she never howls

     at the moon or associates

with ghosts. She doesn’t drink

     blood from skulls. She’s very 

pretty. Has the makings 

     of a catalog model, or a trophy wife. 

But she likes her open grave, despite

     mosquitoes, sun-scorch,

flooding. Townsfolk theorize

     as to how this came about:

some say a golden-haired man, 

    a jilting. Others say she lost

     a baby, that it slipped

out of her like a purple eel

     and swam away. Maybe

she’s a mystic, praying

     for the lightning-lunge 

of some ancient God,

     because what more

could a woman want? So inane,

     all this speculation,

while the answer’s still alive, 

     albeit six-feet under.

Why does no one ask her

     her story? She’s here, 

she’s waiting, she’s dying

     to tell it.


Annie Przypyszny is a poet from Washington, DC pursuing an MFA in Poetry at the University of Maryland. She is an intern at the DC Writers Room and a reader for Bicoastal Review. Her poetry is published or forthcoming in Bear Review, The Emerson Review, Grist, Sugar House Review, Tampa Review, Tupelo Quarterly, Beltway Poetry Quarterly, The Shore Poetry, Soundings East, Poor Yorick, Hellbender Magazine, Midway Journal, and various other journals.


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