The Poetry of Sex

Home > Christian > The Poetry of Sex > Page 4
The Poetry of Sex Page 4

by Hannah, Sophie


  I feel I could be turned to ice

  If this goes on, if this goes on.

  I feel I could be buried twice

  And still the death not yet be done.

  I feel I could be turned to fire

  If there can be no end to this.

  I know within me such desire

  No kiss could satisfy, no kiss.

  I feel I could be turned to stone,

  A solid block not carved at all,

  Because I feel so much alone.

  I could be grave-stone or a wall.

  But better to be turned to earth

  Where other things at least can grow.

  I could be then a part of birth,

  Passive, not knowing how to know.

  He Asked About the Quality

  C. P. Cavafy

  From the office where he’d been taken on

  to fill a position that was trivial and poorly paid

  (eight pounds a month, including bonus) –

  he emerged as soon as he’d finished the dreary tasks

  that kept him bent over his desk all afternoon.

  At seven he came out and began to stroll

  slowly down the street. He was handsome

  in an interesting way, with the look of a man

  who had reached the peak of his sensual potential.

  He’d turned twenty-nine a month before.

  He dawdled along the street, then down

  the shabby alleys that led to his apartment.

  As he passed a little shop that sold cheap

  imitation goods for workmen,

  inside he saw a face, a physique

  that urged him on, and in he walked,

  inquiring about some coloured handkerchiefs.

  He asked about the quality of the handkerchiefs

  and what they cost; his voice

  breaking, almost stifled by desire.

  The answers came back in the same tone,

  distracted, the low timbre

  suggesting veiled consent.

  They went on talking about the merchandise –

  but their sole aim was for their hands to touch

  over the handkerchiefs, for their faces,

  their lips, as if by chance, to brush against each other:

  for some momentary contact of the flesh.

  Swiftly and in secret, so that the shop owner,

  seated at the back, would never notice.

  Trans. Avi Sharon

  Guacamole

  Kaddy Benyon

  Avocados were somewhere on the lust-list

  we made sated on the floor of room 404.

  Write down, you said, write down every wicked

  little dirty thing you’d like us to try. I pitted

  the felt-tip against my teeth, then whispered:

  I want you to carefully split a ripe avocado,

  loosen its pip, scoop out the warm yellowy

  flesh and squeeze it to a gentle pulp, then –

  I stopped – back suddenly at my mother’s side,

  eye-level with hip and kitchen top, glued to

  her hands as she cuts and twists the wizened pears,

  mashes in garlic, the devil-tailed chillies, a

  splash of lime. Ravenous, open-mouthed, I crave

  to lick the buttery mush between her fingers,

  the jaded smear from her wrist, to suck her

  wedding ring, to suck her wedding ring clean.

  Daniel Craig: The Screensaver

  Rich Goodson

  … & when I fail to focus, when I tire,

  he rises like a Christ newly baptised

  in sky-blue trunks, reminding me desire

  will always lie in wait & be disguised

  as men with healing hands & cute-cruel lips

  & arms I’d die for should they ever press

  too hard against my throat.

  When water drips

  from him the fish swim to his feet, confess

  how happily waylaid they are, congeal

  in spasmic foil &, even then, mouth how

  the breeding pools upstream are no big deal.

  Before my eyes bake white like theirs I vow

  I’ll hit a key. Before I go berserk

  I’ll kill him with one finger. Wake up. Work.

  Hypothetical

  Maria Taylor

  A friend of mine asked me if I’d sleep with Daniel Craig,

  would I make love to him or kick him out of bed?

  Before I have time to answer, I’m in bed with Daniel Craig.

  He’s stirring out of sleep, smelling of Tobacco Vanille,

  he flatters my performance, asks if I’d like coffee.

  ‘Hang on,’ I say, ‘I did not sleep with you, Daniel Craig,

  this is just a conversational frolic.’ My friend stands

  in the corner of my bedroom, ‘You’ve gone too far,’ she says.

  I’m pulling the duvet away from his Hollywood body

  at exactly the moment my husband enters the room.

  I say, ‘Yes, this is exactly what it looks like, darling,

  but it’s hypothetical, a mere conversational frolic.’

  He’s threatening me. There are lawyers in the room.

  My children begin to cry. I don’t even like Daniel Craig.

  It’s too late. The sheets are full of secreted evidence.

  There are forensics in the room, covering my body

  in blue powder, checking my skin for finger prints:

  they match Daniel Craig’s. He doesn’t even know

  he’s slept with me. My marriage is a dead gull.

  My neighbours come into the room shaking heads

  oh dear oh dear oh dear. My husband has drawn lists

  of all the things he wants to keep: a plasma screen,

  an Xbox, a collection of muesli-coloured pebbles

  from our holidays in Truro, ‘When you loved me!’

  he snaps. My children will see a therapist after school.

  Daniel Craig is naked in a hypothetical sense,

  telling me we can make this work. My friend smirks

  behind a celebrity magazine featuring lurid details

  of our affair. There are photos. We are on a beach

  in the Dominican Republic, healthy and tanned

  both kicking sand at a playful Joan Collins.

  ‘I don’t even like Daniel Craig,’ I tell the ceiling.

  Found Wanting

  Rosie Sandler

  When you find me wanting

  is it because I cry

  at children’s films –

  how Bambi’s mother

  always dies and E. T.

  always goes home?

  Or because I never know

  which way is North

  or why it matters –

  losing myself

  in the thrill of uncertainty?

  Is it my wanton honesty,

  my wilful ignorance

  or how I scoff

  at boundaries –

  regarding hedgerows

  and faux-pas

  with equal equanimity?

  Or maybe you don’t like

  my singing, the way

  my lungs squeeze

  each note flat.

  But know this:

  I dream in perfect pitch –

  your hands on my breasts

  your lips on my thighs

  my breath on your skin

  my blood beating time with yours.

  So, when you find me wanting,

  do you suspect

  that I’m wanting you

  too much?

  Young Men Dancing

  Linda Chase

  Who were those young men dancing?

  And why were they dancing with you?

  And what was the meaning of all that business

  around the area of the pelvis, both pelvises,

  I mean, since I saw you with two of them –

 
two men, that is, with one pelvis each.

  Though there is your pelvis too, to reckon with.

  It made quite a show of itself out there

  on the dance floor. Not to be overlooked

  nor slighted in any way, sticking like a magnet

  to the erratic rhythms of those young men,

  their jeans curving and cupping and making

  promises in all directions of things to come.

  Which way to go, you must have asked yourself

  a dozen times at least, as the young man

  with the smile turned this way, and the

  young man with the dreamy eyes turned that,

  and you were dazed, in circles, spinning

  this way and that way, brushing up against them

  in confusion, body parts in gentle friction

  sliding back and forth, nearly seeming like

  you hadn’t meant to do it.

  Did you mean to do it?

  Could they feel your nipples harden?

  Did they know what must have happened

  as your thighs began to stick together, throbbing

  to the music? Thank God there was the music

  you could hide behind and make it look like dancing.

  I’m wondering just how much attention

  young men pay.

  Sandcastles

  Richard Scott

  A tall gent waits

  inside the playground

  not looking at any one child

  but rather mostly

  at the dog-dark door

  of the public lavs

  and the shadows

  pooling within.

  I wish I could enjoy

  forging sandcastles with you

  and your two-year-old,

  filling the lime-green bucket,

  packing it down

  with the luminous shovel …

  only now this man is

  watching me –

  he’s caught me

  amongst the families,

  caught me trying to play daddy.

  His gaze is iron-heavy

  as he walks

  to the lavatory door,

  pauses, like he were crossing a road,

  then enters …

  In one version of the poem I

  follow him in, slide up next to the cistern.

  He bolts the grimy cubicle door

  behind us. Unzips my jeans.

  In another I stay building with your daughter,

  perfecting the castle’s keep, the last place to be breached

  in a siege. In another I’m disgusted by these queers

  who hang around toilets trying to catch my eye.

  In another I am your husband – I yearn to leave

  our daughter alone for just a handful of minutes –

  she’d be fine out here – knowing there is more love

  for me in there, with him.

  In the last version I am your daughter,

  sculpting the intricate castle from damp sand

  pitted through with fag ends and gum –

  oblivious to the men, the poem being written.

  Remember, Body …

  C. P. Cavafy

  Body, remember not only how deeply you were loved,

  not only the many beds where you lay,

  but also those desires that flashed

  openly in their eyes

  or trembled in the voice – and were thwarted

  by some chance impediment.

  Now that all of them are locked away in the past,

  it almost seems as if you surrendered

  to even those pre-empted desires – how they flashed, remember,

  in the eyes of those who looked at you, how they trembled

  in the voice for you, remember, body.

  Trans. Avi Sharon

  Love & Sex & Boys in Showers

  John Whitworth

  Wishing, wondering, thinking, talking,

  Is it Medicine? Is it Smarties?

  Difficult, like tightrope walking?

  Easy, like a broken heart is?

  Where the sea along the shore moans,

  Hear the humming of the hormones,

  Messages of meeting, parting,

  Is it worth the grief of starting?

  Can the sweets outweigh the sours?

  Love & Sex & Boys in Showers.

  Suppose I let him go too far, but

  Just how far is that precisely?

  Suppose we do it in the car, but

  After will he treat me nicely?

  Everything I want’s illicit,

  Adult, sexually explicit.

  When he stuns me with his kisses,

  Sweet as Sugar, bold as Bliss is,

  Will I savour them for hours?

  Love & Sex & Boys in Showers.

  Steamy dreams of saltlick shoulders,

  Peach-fuzz thighs and silky bottom.

  Hearts have reasons. They’re as old as

  Time. I swear I think I’ve got ’em.

  Shy and shyer, fond and fonder,

  There, where ocean meets blue yonder,

  Skinnydips on desert island,

  Wisechild wideness of his smile and

  Lotus blossoms, passion flowers,

  Love & Sex & Boys in Showers.

  Princesses are racked and gloomy,

  Fated, dated, triste and tragic.

  Lose a few and draw a few – my

  Life’s like football. Football’s magic.

  Choose the time, the place, the weapons.

  Karma’s just the shit that happens,

  Everything we have is ours,

  We’ve got paranormal powers,

  Princesses are shut in towers,

  Love & Sex & Boys in Showers.

  Service

  Gregory Woods

  For all that he’s a sullen brute,

  His pout is cute. In silhouette

  The bursting of a rotten fruit,

  It putters, muttering his fret,

  Expressive though completely mute.

  His lips could flay a clarinet,

  His tongue electrocute a flute.

  Worth challenging to a duet,

  With fists like his he could transmute

  A fight into a minuet,

  A blunderbuss into a lute.

  Within some squalid oubliette

  He strips down to his birthday suit –

  Tattoo and hand-rolled cigarette

  The remnants of his ill-repute –

  His nakedness no less a threat

  Than uniformed in hot pursuit

  Of somebody to shoot or pet,

  More rigid than in full salute.

  How could one get this dun cadet

  To proffer if not prostitute

  Himself; develop the coquette

  Within the manly absolute?

  I’d tempt him to forget regret,

  That fetter to the dissolute;

  To whet his appetite, I’d let

  Him flatten me with his hirsute

  Anatomy, the better yet

  His persecution to refute;

  I’d lick his feet (sweet etiquette!),

  Recruit his sweat, and substitute

  His carcan with a carcanet.

  O Little One

  Marilyn Hacker

  O little one, this longing is the pits.

  I’m horny as a timber wolf in heat.

  Three times a night, I tangle up the sheet.

  I seem to flirt with everything with tits:

  Karyn at lunch, who knows I think she’s cute;

  my ex, the DA on the Sex Crimes Squad;

  Iva’s gnarled, canny New England god-

  mother, who was my Saturday night date.

  I’m trying to take things one at a time:

  Situps at bedtime, less coffee, less meat,

  more showers, till a remedy appears.

  Since there’s already quite enough Sex Crime,

/>   I think I ought to be kept off the street.

  What are you doing for the next five years?

  Troilism

  Roddy Lumsden

  I could mention X, locked naked

  in the spare room by two so taken

  with each other, they no longer needed him,

  or Y who, with an erection in either hand,

  said she felt like she was skiing,

  or Z who woke in a hotel bed in a maze

  of shattered champagne glass

  between two hazy girls, his wallet light.

  Me? I never tried it, though like many

  I thought and thought about it

  until a small moon rose above a harvest field,

  which was satisfying, in its own way, enough.

  Assurance

  Emma Lazarus

  Last night I slept, and when I woke her kiss

  Still floated on my lips. For we had strayed

  Together in my dream, through some dim glade,

  Where the shy moonbeams scarce dared light our bliss.

  The air was dank with dew, between the trees,

  The hidden glow-worms kindled and were spent.

  Cheek pressed to cheek, the cool, the hot night-breeze

  Mingled our hair, our breath, and came and went,

  As sporting with our passion. Low and deep

  Spake in mine ear her voice: ‘And didst thou dream,

  This could be buried? This could be sleep?

  And love be thrall to death! Nay, whatso seem,

  Have faith, dear heart; this is the thing that is!’

  Thereon I woke, and on my lips her kiss.

  Losing It to David Cassidy

  Catherine Smith

  That hot evening, all through our clumsy fuck,

  David smiled down from the wall. His ironed hair,

  American teeth. Eyes on me, his best girl.

 

‹ Prev