Glass Slipper Sonnet By: Angela Alaimo O'Donnell

53 1 0
                                    

Pity the poor step-sister those big feet

she'll never stuff in a size-six sonnet,

her flesh so fulsome the slipper seems effete,
unworthy of the labor spent on it.

But try she must, and so she makes a pass,
jams four fat toes in the narrow throat,

the fifth pig smarting, pressed against the glass
(though pain's no stranger—she knows it by rote.)

The other shoe drops—as it is wont to do—
a second foot is squeezed into the vamp.

She stands up straight and takes a stride towards you,
her footfall heavy as a farmgirl's tramp.


The slipper strains against those excess feet.
She hobbles onward—she has a prince to meet.

Poetry - The Best Poems Ever WroteWhere stories live. Discover now