Between the Stingers
Trust, like a pitiless whore-master, grins
as between the sheets and at my breasts, he suckles.
Though Cupid lauds’ the joy, I feel only stings.
The manic moon shivers to shriek-like violins
as trusting seed is split and son-less my knees buckle–
mother-less street urchin blanched, impatient, sin.
In sympathy the sun pales night’s mood swings
seeking to caress and hold with a fractured chuckle–
love’s exhausted, and misspent, ripening lingers;
the dying day and I, cry of might-have-beens.
My ivory hands are icy white, my bleeding knuckles
trust like a pitiless whore-master grins
though Cupid lauds’ the joy, I feel only stings.
The Sowing
Upon the wind-sheltered hillside;
the sharp tang of metal and the sting of salt air lay
over a field of blood-red poppies—no Flanders Field.
At year’s fall, fields of rape roll like waves,
in the harshness of winter-sleet, stray boulders bow
like the backs of mothers, and daughters sowing.
Their nails torn, ragged, and bleeding.
They bleed by the moon, and son, upon the fields.
No white crosses mark their passing.
For hundreds of years, and crops of rape, barley and wheat,
small hands, soft hands, and soft thighs bleed.
They bleed daughters, and sons.
They birth the fields by consent or rape and in the
fields unadorned by silver stars or purple hearts—they writhe.
Today, as May’s sun wakes the blood-blasted pasture
each precious drop blooms, a heroine’s soul—
acknowledged by the poppies yield.
Sweet Meats
Life from a fish bowl—
encapsulated—above and behind the
gilded dado’s of peachy-pink
and flannel-gray of San Francisco’s
Victorian Ladies
Life wrapped with the ledges,
draped with hangovers and portcullis
frail, precious, half-formed, half-crazed
often newly-born each Lilliputian presence
a sweet meat inside their saccharin selves
Life dawns, as a colorful array of
hard candy-colored covers
shaken forth from raspberry doors—
coffee toffee
liquorice bits
vanilla suckers
all with their surprisingly soft centers
sweeten the San Francisco’s scene
“Sweet Meats” reminds me of a different way in which to see a city. Its an enjoyable view.
Upon rereading “Between the Stingers” I find it to be very telling and open…thank you.