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    Mercy

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      with gravel lots and a winding cement road, Dorothy

      tap-dances to Oz, up the yellow brick road, the great gray road,

      he’s on you, twisted on top o f you, his arms twisted in your

      arms, his legs twisted in your legs, he’s twisted in you, there’s

      a great animal in the dark, him twisting draped over you, the

      sweat silver and slick; the houses are brick, monuments

      around you, you’re laid out dead and they’re the headstones,

      nothing written on them, they tower over your body put to

      rest. The only signs o f existence are on you, you carry them on

      you, the marks, the bruises, the scars, your body gets marked

      where you exist, it’s a history book with the signs o f civilized

      life, communication, the city, the society, belles lettres, a

      primitive alphabet o f blood and pain, the flesh poem, poem o f

      the girl, when a girl says yes, what a girl says yes to, what

      happens to a girl who is poesy on cement, your body the paper

      and the poem, the press and the ink, the singer and the song;

      it’s real, it’s literal, this song o f myself, yo u ’re what there is,

      the medium, the message, the sign, the signifier; an autistic

      poem. Tattooed boys are your friends, they write the words

      on their skin; but your skin gets used up, scraped aw ay every

      time they push you down, you carry what you got and what

      you know, all your belongings, him on you through time, in

      the scars— your meanings, your lists, your items, your serial

      numbers and identification numbers, social security, registration, which one you are, your name in blood spread thin on

      your skin, spread out on porous skin, thin and stretched, a

      delicate shade o f fear toughened by callouses o f hate; and you

      learn to read your name on your body written in your blood,

      the book o f signs, manhood or courage but it’s different when

      pussy does it. Y ou don’t set up housekeeping, a room with

      things; instead you carry it all on you, not on your back tied

      down, or on your head piled up; it’s in you, carved in, the cold

      on you, you on cement, sexy abrasions, sexy blood, sexy

      black and blue, the heat’s on you, your sw eat’s a wet

      membrane between you and the weather, all there is, and you

      have burns, scars, there’s gray cement, a silver gray under a

      tarnished, brassy moon, there’s a cement graveyard, brick

      gravestones, the em pty brick buildings; and yo u ’re laid out,

      for the fucking. Walt was a fool, a virgin fool; you would have

      been ground down, it’s not love, it’s slaughter, you fucking

      fool. I’m the field, they fall on me and bruise the ground, you

      don’t hear the earth you fall on crying out but a poet should

      know. Prophets are fucking fools. What I figured out is that

      writers sit in rooms and make it up. M arx made it up. Walt

      made it up. Fucking fools like me believe it; do it; foot soldiers

      in hell. Sleep is the worst time, God puts you in a fuck-m e

      position, you can’t run, you can’t fight, you can’t stay alive

      without luck, you’re in the dark and dead, they can get you,

      have you, use you; you manage to disappear, become invisible

      in the dark, or it’s like being hung out to dry, you’re under

      glass, in a museum, all laid out, on display, waiting fpr

      whatever gang passes by to piss on you; it’s inside, they’re not

      supposed to come inside but there is no inside where they can’t

      come, it’s only doors and windows to keep them out, open

      sesame and the doors and windows open or they bash them

      open and no one stops them and you’re inside laid out for

      them, come, hurt me now, I’m lying flat, helpless, some

      fucking innocent naked baby, a sweet, helpless thing all curled

      up like a fetus as if I were safe, inside her; but there’s nothing

      between you and them; she’s not between you and them. Why

      did God make you have to sleep? I was born in Camden; I’m

      twenty; I can’t remember the last time I heard my name. M y

      name is and will the real one please stand up, do you remember

      that game show on television, from when it was easy. Women

      will whisper it to you, even dirty street women; even leather

      women; even mean women. Y ou have to be careful i f you

      want it from the street women; they might be harder than you,

      know where you’re soft, see through you, you’re all different

      with them because maybe they can see through you. M aybe

      you’re not the hardest bitch. Maybe she’s going to take from

      you. I don’t give; I take. It’s when she’s on me I hear m y name;

      doesn’t matter who she is, I love her to death, women are

      generous this way, the meanest o f us, I say her name, she says

      mine, kisses brushing inside the ear, she’s wet all over me, it’s

      all continuous, you’re not in little pieces, I hear m y name like

      the sound o f the ocean in a shell; whether she’s saying it or not.

      We’re twisted around each other inside slime and sweat and

      tear drops, w e’re the wave and the surf, the undercurrent, the

      pounding o f the tidal wave halfway around the world banging

      the beach on a bright, sunny day, the tide, high tide, low tide,

      under the moon or under a black sky, w e’re the sand wet and

      hard deserted by the water, the sand under the water, gravel

      and shell and m oving claws crawling. I remember this one

      woman because I wanted her so bad but something was

      wrong, she was lying to me, telling me m y lie but no woman

      lies to me. There’s this woman at night I remember, in a

      restaurant I go when I’m taking a break, kosher restaurant

      with old men waiters, all night it’s open, big room, plain

      tables, high ceilings, ballroom high and wide, big, em pty

      feeling, old, old building, in N ew Y o rk , wide dow ntow n

      street, gray street, fluorescent lights, a greenish light on green

      walls, oil paint, green, the old men have thick Jew ish accents,

      they’re slow m oving, you can feel their bones aching, I sit

      alone over coffee and soup and she’s there at the next table, the

      room ’s em pty but she sits at the table next to me, black leather

      pants, she’s got black hair, painted black, like I always wanted,

      and I want her but I’m her prey because she wants a bow l o f

      fucking soup, she’s picked me, she’s coming for me, how did

      that happen, how did it get all fucked up, she sees me as the

      mark because I’ve got the food which means I’ve got the

      money and I can’t go with her now because she has an

      underlying bad motive, she wants to eat, and what I feel for

      her is complete sex, so I’m the dope; and I don’t do the dopey

      part; it’s m y game and she’s playing it on me; she’s got muscles

      and I want to see the insides o f her thighs, I want to feel them, I

      want her undressed, I want her legs around m y shoulders, she

      smiles, asks me how I am; be a fool, tell her how you are. I

      look right through her. I stare right through her while I’m

      deciding what to do. I ain’t giving; I take. I want to be with

      her, I want to be between her legs and all over her and her

      thighs a
    vise around m y neck; I want m y teeth in her; I want

      her muscles squeezing me to death and I want to push dow n on

      her shoulders and I want m y thighs crushing down on her, all

      m y weight on her hips, m y skin, bluish, on the inside o f m y

      thighs feeling her bones; but I'm the mark, that’s how she sees

      it, and maybe she’s meaner than me, or crazy, or harder, or

      feels less, or needs less, so she’s on top and she takes; how

      many times have I done what she’s doing now and did they

      want me the w ay I want her; well, they’re stupid and I’m not;

      it hurts not to take her with me, I could put m y hand on her

      and she’d come, I stare right through her, I look right through

      her but I’m devouring her at the same time which means she

      knows I’m a fool; she’s acting harmless but maybe it’s a lie, my

      instincts say it’s a lie, there’s no harmless women left alive this

      time o f night, not on these streets. Y ou risk too much if you go

      with a woman who needs less than you do; if you don’t have

      to, if you have a choice, you don’t take risks— you could lose

      your heart or your money or your speed; fucking fool who has

      a choice and doesn’t use it; it’s stupid middle-class girls you

      have to find or street women past wanting, past ambition,

      they live on bits o f this and pieces o f that, they’re not looking

      for any heavy score, they live almost on air, it’s pat, habit, they

      don’t need you, but sometimes they like a taste; survival’s an

      art, there are nuances, she’s a dangerous piece o f shit, stunning

      black eyes, and I’m smitten, and I walk out, look behind me,

      she came out, watched me, didn’t follow, made me nervous, I

      don’t often pass up what I want, I don’t like doing it, it leaves

      an ache, don’t like to ache too long without distracting m yself

      by activity, anything to pass the time, and it makes me restless

      and careless, to want someone like that; I wanted her, she

      wanted food, money, most o f what happens happens for food,

      all kinds o f food, deep hungers that rock you in their

      everloving arms, rocked to eternal sleep by what you need, the

      song o f myself, I need; need her; remember her; need women;

      need to hear m y name; wanted her; she wanted food. What’s

      inside you gets narrow and mean— it’s an edge, it cuts, it’s a

      slice o f sharp, a line at the blade’s end, no surface, no waste, no

      tease, a thin line where your meanest edge meets the air; an

      edge, no blade you can see. If you could stomp on me, this is

      what yo u ’d see— a line, touch it, yo u ’re slivers. I’d be cut

      glass, yo u ’d be feet. Y o u ’d dance blood. The edge o f the blade,

      no surface, just what cuts, a thin line, touch it, draw blood.

      Inside, nothing else is alive. Where’s the love I dream of. I hole

      up, like a bug in a rug. There’s women who bore me; wasted

      time; the taste o f death; junkie time; a junkie woman comes to

      me, long, languid afternoons making love but I didn’t like it,

      she got beat up by her boyfriend, she’s sincerely in love, black

      and blue, loving you, and he’s her source; pure love; true

      romance. D on ’t like m ixing women with obligation— in this

      case, the obligation to redeem her from pain. I want to want; I

      like wanting, ju st so it gets fulfilled and I don’t have to wait too

      long; I like the ache just long enough to make what touches it

      appreciated a little more, a little drama, a little pain. I don’t like

      no beat-up piece o f shit; junkie stooge. Y ou don’t want the

      edge o f the blade to get dull; then you got dullness inside and

      this you can’t afford. The w om an’s got to be free; a beast o f

      freedom; not a predator needing a bow l o f fucking soup, not a

      fool needing a fucking fix; she’s got to give freedom off, exude

      it, she’s got to be grand with freedom, all swelled up with it, a

      Madame Curie o f freedom, or she’s Garbo, or more likely,

      she’s Che, she’s got to be a monster o f freedom, a hero o f

      loveless love; Napoleon but they didn’t lock her up or she got

      loose, now, for me; no beat up junkie fool; no beautiful piece

      looking for a hamburger. There’s magnificent women out

      here. These lights light you up. Y ou are on Broadw ay and

      there are stars o f a high magnitude. There’s the queen o f them

      all who taught me— sweet name, Rebecca; ruthless crusher o f

      a dyke; honest to God, she’s wearing a gold lame dress when I

      meet her in jail when I’m a kid, eighteen, a political prisoner as

      it were, as I saw myself, and she loves poetry and she sends me

      a pile o f New Yorker magazines because, she says, I’m a poet;

      and I don’t want her on me, not in jail, I’m too scared, too

      hurt, but she protects me anyway, and I get out fast enough

      that I don’t have to do her, and I see her later out here and I

      remember her kindness, which it was, real kindness, taking

      care o f me in that place, which was w hy I was treated right by

      the other inmates as it were; I see her on the street, gold lame

      against a window, I see her shimmering, and I go with her for

      thanks and because she is grand, and I find out you can be free

      in a gold lame dress, in jail, whoring, in black skin, in hunger,

      in pain, in strife, the strife o f the streets, perpetual war, gritty,

      gray, she’s the wild one with freedom in her soul, it translates

      into how you touch, what’s in your fingers, the silk in your

      hands, the freedom you take with who you got under you;

      you got your freedom and you take theirs for when you are

      with them, you are a caretaker o f the fragile freedom in them,

      because most women don’t got much, and you don’t be afraid

      to take, you turn their skin to flames, you eat them raw, your

      name’s all over them, you wrap them up in you, crush them in

      you, and what you give is ambition, the ambition to do it

      big, do it great, big gestures, free— girls do it big, girls soar,

      girls burn, girls take big not puny; stop giving, child, better

      to be stole from than to give— stop giving away the little that

      you got. I stay with her until she’s finished with me, she’s

      doing her art on me, she’s practicing freedom on me; I’m

      shaking from it, her great daring, the audacity o f her body on

      mine; she’s free on me and I learn from it on me how to do it

      and how to be it; flamboyant lovemaking, no apology, dead

      serious, we could die right after this and this is the last thing

      we know and it’s enough, the last minute, the last time, the

      last touch, God comes down through her on me, the good

      God, the divine God; master lovemaker, lightning in a girl,

      I’ve got a new theology, She’s a rough Girl; and what’s

      between m y legs is a running river, She made it then She

      rested; a running river; so deep, so long, clear, bright, smart,

      racing, white foam over a cliff and then a dead drop and then it

      keeps on going, running, racing, then the smooth, silk calm, the

      deep calm, the long, silk body, smooth. I heard some man say I

      put it in her smooth, smo
    oth was a noun, and I knew right

      away he liked children, he’s after children, there are such men;

      but it’s not what I mean; I mean that together w e’re smooth, it’s

      smooth, w e’re smooth on each other, it’s a smooth ride; and if I

      died right after I wouldn’t feel cheated or sorry and every time

      I’m happy I had her one more second and I feel proud she wants

      me; and she’ll disappear, she’ll take someone else, but I’ll sit here

      like a dumb little shit until she does, a student, sitting, waiting at

      her feet, let her touch me once, then once more, I’m happy near

      her, her freedom ’s holding me tight, her freedom ’s on me,

      around me, climbing inside me, her freedom ’s embracing me;

      wild woman; a wild w om an’s pussy that will not die for some

      junkie prick; nor songwriter; nor businessman; nor

      philosopher. The men are outside, they want to come in, I

      hear them rattling around, death threats, destruction isn’t

      quiet or subtle, imagine those for whom it is, safe, blessedly

      safe; so in m y last minutes on this earth, perhaps, I am

      remembering Rebecca who taught me freedom; I would sit

      down quiet next to her, wait for her, watch her; did you ever

      love a girl? I’ve loved several; loved. N ot just wanted but

      loved in thought or action. Wasn’t raped by any o f them. I

      mean, rape’s just a word, it doesn’t mean anything, someone

      fucks you, so what? I can’t see complaining about it. But I

      wasn’t hurt by any o f them. I don’t mean I w asn’t hurt by love;

      shit, that’s what love does, it drags your heart over a bed o f

      nails, I was hurt by love, lazy, desperate drinks through long

      nights o f pain without her, hurting bad. Wasn’t pushed

      around. Saw others who were. It’s not that wom en don’t. It’s

      just that it had m y name on it, men said pussy or dyke or

      whatever stupid distortion but I saw freedom, I heard Andrea,

      I found freedom under her, wrapped around her, her lips on

      me and her hands on me, in me, her thighs holding on to me;

      there’s always men around waiting to break in, throw

      themselves on top, pull you down; but wom en’s different, it’s

     


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