The Second Mona Lisa is Not Real But
Yun-Fei Wang
Taipei, Taiwan
Taipei Fuhsing Private School
Poetry
she is a hand reaching into time and threading each hour-hand
like a girl braiding her lover’s burnt ends, tucked in a hat
worn by the other brood, a mouth with cavities rotting
lopsided. The difference between pretty and beautiful is that
men only see pretty (and girls fear the beautiful): slip-ups
between lip & chin between chin & the underside of the jaw
between tongue & neck between air. Historians say
the first Mona Lisa could’ve been da Vinci’s gay male lover and that
the Louvre was a place for beheading in the Reign of Terror, so
which was harder to sound out––the syllables of gay or
beheading? or two in the same breath? The second Mona Lisa
is your middle school crush engraving a slur into
your locker door hinge & you remembering it as a love
letter / is the stash of nude magazines under your childhood bedframe /
is the drunken incurvature in a back-alley bar either a warp of time
or a stranger’s asymmetrical dimple/ is the brutal lingering
of that summer had you been older it would’ve meant something
but not before the spectacles of God, never out loud. Ghastly face,
a less sculpted countenance, the second Mona Lisa is a painting
in which you reach out to her jaw––neck––clavicle––bare-skin and
she smiles, more beautiful than pretty (and you remember
your teachers telling you that girls should like beautiful things.)
The second Mona Lisa is one of those billboards in museums
that visitors stick their heads in for a picture until it is your turn
& the cardboard breaks into a guillotine and you learn
that the second Mona Lisa could be anyone but you who wrote
this poem: in your lines you are the only conscious ghost &
the second Mona Lisa is not real despite your disillusioned efforts
capitalizing her name like one’s clandestine affair / locket necklace
after the living room lights fall dim, name lodged in the rhyme scheme
of this poem that does not rhyme / is someone covering up
slurs on their locker door for the first time––not knowing
the first Mona Lisa could’ve been da Vinci’s male lover (and the second
could’ve been anything if she were real.) Your body folds itself
through time and guillotine while the Lorde song plays & you see
a feminine hand anchoring your filet of a head between your
childhood bedframe and the frame of your pale white body. The
second Mona Lisa is a free-pass, a coupon, thrown on the museum floor,
a fallacy for you to forgive your middle school love,
your Mona Lisa all this time, circled back to before the first.
EDITORIAL PRAISE
Achingly intimate, “The Second Mona Lisa is Not Real But” tumbles headfirst into its reflections, seizing the archetypal Mona Lisa and reshaping her replica in an exploration of sexuality, vulnerability, and coming of age. The author constructs cuttingly cyclical visuals of the human body, with each vignette diverging into a separate narrative as the speaker navigates the fluid boundaries of reality and conception. Ultimately, the piece tapers off at its emotional zenith, evoking a silence that persists.
Yun-Fei Wang is a high school student from Taiwan and an incoming freshman at Wellesley College. She has been recognized by the John Locke Institute, Polyphony Lit, Bow Seat, and more.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR