Chez Jane
                        
                            By Frank O'Hara
                        
                    
                
                                                                
                            The white chocolate jar full of petals
 swills odds and ends around in a dizzying eye   
 of four o’clocks now and to come. The tiger,   
 marvellously striped and irritable, leaps   
 on the table and without disturbing a hair   
 of the flowers’ breathless attention, pisses   
 into the pot, right down its delicate spout.
 A whisper of steam goes up from that porcelain   
 urethra. “Saint-Saëns!” it seems to be whispering,   
 curling unerringly around the furry nuts   
 of the terrible puss, who is mentally flexing.   
 Ah be with me always, spirit of noisy   
 contemplation in the studio, the Garden   
 of Zoos, the eternally fixed afternoons!   
 There, while music scratches its scrofulous   
 stomach, the brute beast emerges and stands,   
 clear and careful, knowing always the exact peril   
 at this moment caressing his fangs with   
 a tongue given wholly to luxurious usages;   
 which only a moment before dropped aspirin   
 in this sunset of roses, and now throws a chair   
 in the air to aggravate the truly menacing.
                
                    
                        Frank O’Hara, “Chez Jane” from Meditations in an Emergency. Copyright © 1957 by Frank O’Hara. Reprinted with the permission of Grove/Atlantic, Inc., www.groveatlantic.com.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        The Collected Poems of Frank O'Hara
                                                                                                                                                                    (1995)