Slow Death
People doing what needs to be done,
tread their tongues to mouth
the end of a lover’s name.
Empty sound escapes
as if they are screaming
at the bottom of a lake.
Saint John sealed both of my eyes
in the middle of the night,
pistol in his left hand, furious.
Night is for loving or sleeping, he said.
I can do neither so I let him blind me,
drive his fingers into me until I believe
every word he says about the long lengths
of men, that there are no flat surfaces in the dark.
When he leaves I see Mary walking on water.
She carries a magazine in her left hand
and its pages are open to clean faces
performing the functions of divorce,
foreheads split in two from a pale hand
forcing in a stripped screw. The holes
of their ears are hooked to the concrete
and drying up across the floor.
I know now that nothing can be rebuilt.
The ordinary man has to pay for repairs.
Mary holds my hand for longer than usual,
strange, turbulent, not speaking. I ask
if everything is capable of being broken.
This is a fixed disaster, she says.
It is both linear and circular.
You are both circle and line.
Ophelia became the swamp
and I wish to be her crooked body
kicked and torn and beaten.
What a romantic way to be,
fused with dark morning rain
death’s stamp on shining cheeks.
2 comments:
people are afraid to comment because it's so meaty.
haha like beef stew?
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