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    The Best American Erotic Poems

    Page 8
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      drink

      poured another.

      she was

      good.

      she had a college

      degree

      some place back

      East.

      “get it, Helga, get

      it!”

      there was a loud

      knock

      on the front

      door.

      “HANK, IS HELGA

      THERE?”

      “WHO?”

      “HELGA!”

      “JUST A MINUTE!”

      “THIS IS NINA, I WAS

      SUPPOSED TO MEET

      HELGA HERE, WE HAVE A

      LITTLE SURPRISE FOR

      YOU!”

      “YOU TRIED TO STEAL

      MY WHISKEY, YOU

      WHORE!”

      “HANK, LET ME

      IN!”

      “get it, Helga, get

      it!”

      “HANK!”

      “Helga, you fucking whore…

      Helga! Helga! Helga!!”

      I pulled away and

      got up.

      “let her in.”

      I went to the

      bathroom.

      when I came out they

      were both sitting there

      drinking and smoking

      laughing about

      something.

      then they

      saw me.

      “50 bucks,” said Nina.

      “25 bucks,” I said.

      “we won’t do it

      then.”

      “don’t then.”

      Nina inhaled

      exhaled.

      “all right, you

      cheap bastard, 25

      bucks!”

      Nina stood up and

      began taking her

      clothes off.

      she was the hardest

      of them

      all.

      Helga stood up and

      began taking her

      clothes off.

      I poured a

      drink.

      “sometimes I wonder

      what the hell is

      going on

      around here,” I

      said.

      “don’t worry about

      it, Daddy, just

      get with it!”

      “just what am I

      supposed to

      do?”

      “just do

      whatever the fuck

      you feel

      like doing,”

      said Nina

      her big ass

      blazing

      in the

      lamplight.

      (1992)

      HAYDEN CARRUTH (BORN 1921)

      Assignment

      “Then write,” she said. “By all means, if that’s

      how you feel about it. Write poems.

      Write about the recurved arcs of my breasts

      joined in an angle at my nipples, how

      the upper curve tilts toward the sky and the lower

      reverses sharply back into my torso,

      write about how my throat rises from the supple

      hinge of my collarbones proudly so to speak

      with the coin-sized hollow at the center, write

      of the perfect arch of my jaw when I hold

      my head back—these are the things in which I too

      take delight—write how my skin is

      fine like a cover of snow but warm and soft and

      fitted to me perfectly, write the volupté

      of soap frothing in my curling crotch-hair, write

      the tight parabola of my vulva that resembles

      a braided loop swung from a point,

      write the two dapples of light on the backs

      of my knees, write my ankles so neatly turning

      in their sockets to deploy all the sweet

      bones of my feet, write how when I am aroused

      I sway like a cobra and make sounds

      of sucking with my mouth and brush my nipples

      with the tips of my left-hand fingers, and then

      write how all this is continually pre-existing in my

      thought and how I effect it in myself

      by my will, which you are not permitted to understand.

      Do this. Do it in pleasure and with

      devotion, and don’t worry about time. I won’t

      need what you’ve done until you finish.”

      (1991)

      RICHARD WILBUR (BORN 1921)

      A Late Aubade

      You could be sitting now in a carrel

      Turning some liver-spotted page,

      Or rising in an elevator-cage

      Toward Ladies’ Apparel.

      You could be planting a raucous bed

      Of salvia, in rubber gloves,

      Or lunching through a screed of someone’s loves

      With pitying head,

      Or making some unhappy setter

      Heel, or listening to a bleak

      Lecture on Schoenberg’s serial technique.

      Isn’t this better?

      Think of all the time you are not

      Wasting, and would not care to waste,

      Such things, thank God, not being to your taste.

      Think what a lot

      Of time, by woman’s reckoning,

      You’ve saved, and so may spend on this,

      You who had rather lie in bed and kiss

      Than anything.

      It’s almost noon, you say? If so,

      Time flies, and I need not rehearse

      The rosebuds-theme of centuries of verse.

      If you must go,

      Wait for a while, then slip downstairs

      And bring us up some chilled white wine,

      And some blue cheese, and crackers, and some fine

      Ruddy-skinned pears.

      (1969)

      JAMES SCHUYLER (1923–1991)

      A photograph

      shows you in a London

      room: books, a painting,

      your smile, a silky

      tie, a suit. And more.

      It looks so like you

      and I see it every day

      (here, on my desk)

      which I don’t you. Last

      Friday night was grand.

      We went out, we came

      back, we went wild. You

      slept. Me too. The pup

      woke you and you dressed

      and walked him. When

      you left, I was sleeping.

      When I woke there was

      just time to make the

      train to a country dinner

      and talk about ecstasy.

      Which I think comes in

      two sorts: that which you

      know “Now I’m ecstatic”

      like my strange scream

      last Friday night. And

      another kind, that you

      know only in retrospect:

      “Why, that joy I felt

      and didn’t think about

      when his feet were in

      my lap, or when I looked

      down and saw his slanty

      eyes shut, that too was

      ecstasy. Nor is there

      necessarily a downer from

      it.” Do I believe in

      the perfectibility of

      man? Strangely enough,

      (I’ve known unhappiness

      enough) I

      do. I mean it,

      I really do believe

      future generations can

      live without the intervals

      of anxious

      fear we know between our

      bouts and strolls of

      ecstasy. The struck ball

      finds the pocket. You

      smile some years back

      in London, I have

      known ecstasy and calm:

      haven’t you, too? Let’s

      try to understand, my

      handsome friend who

      wears his nose awry.

      (1974)

      LOUIS SIMPSON (BORN 1923)

      Summer Storm

     
    ; In that so sudden summer storm they tried

      Each bed, couch, closet, carpet, car-seat, table,

      Both river banks, five fields, a mountain side,

      Covering as much ground as they were able.

      A lady, coming on them in the dark

      In a white fixture, wrote to the newspapers

      Complaining of the statues in the park.

      By Cupid, but they cut some pretty capers!

      The envious oxen in still rings would stand

      Ruminating. Their sweet incessant plows

      I think had changed the contours of the land

      And made two modest conies move their house.

      God rest them well, and firmly shut the door.

      Now they are married Nature breathes once more.

      (1949)

      ROBIN BLASER (BORN 1925)

      2nd Tale: Return

      the oldest one and his sister and brother were

      lost and he thought, telling a story

      will keep fear away. so he began

      the right path is further to your left

      where the well is. and he looked

      into the water and the water looked

      back. now it is certain that water

      is a magical substance. it will drink

      up all things. and I am told this is

      most like love, who stood near the

      high way, and because it is one of

      the few bare places the world has

      ever known, love asked directions,

      but the high way ran on. now it is

      certain that the high way is a magical

      substance, it will lead inside the

      shape of things. and I am told this

      is most like love, who has an amazing

      ability to surprise travellers. love

      asked the first hitch-hiker to spend

      the night with him at the side of the

      high way, but the hiker went on. now

      it is certain that a hitch-hiker is

      a magical substance which moves along.

      and I am told this is most like love,

      who has an amazing ability to pass on.

      love, then, was quite alone the next

      morning, and he stood stock-still

      trying to understand, because in the

      bright sun, the high way appeared to go

      straight on without curves, turn-offs

      or junctions into a kind of watery

      air. the rule is, walk on the left

      side facing traffic if you don’t want

      to be killed. this love did

      until after a very long time, he

      entered the watery air, which I

      remember, is when

      they were found

      (1969)

      KENNETH KOCH (1925–2002)

      To Orgasms

      You’ve never really settled down

      Have you, orgasms?

      Restless, roving, and not funny

      In any way

      You change consciousness

      Directly, not

      Shift of gears

      But changing cars

      Is more like it. I said my prayers

      Ate lunch, read books, and had you.

      Someone was there, later, to join me and you

      In our festivity, a woman named N.

      She said oh we shouldn’t do

      This I replied oh we should

      We did and had you

      After you I possess this loveable

      Person and she possesses me

      There is no more we can do

      Until the phone rings

      And then we start to plan for you again

      And it is obvious

      Life may be centered in you

      I began to think that every day

      Was just one of the blossoms

      On the infinitely blossoming

      Tree of life

      When it was light out we’d say

      Soon it will be dark

      And when it was dark

      We’d say soon it will be light

      And we had you.

      Sometimes

      We’d be sitting at the table

      Thinking of you

      Or of something related to you

      And smiled at other times

      Might worry

      We read a lot of things about you

      Some seemed wrong

      It seemed

      Puzzling that we had you

      Or rather that you

      Could have us, in a way,

      When you wished to

      Though

      We had to wish so too

      Ah, like what a wild person

      To have in the Berkeley apartment!

      If anyone knew

      That you were there! But they must have known!

      You rampaged about we tried to keep you secret.

      I mentioned you to no one.

      What would there be to say?

      That every night or every day

      You turned two persons into stone

      Hit by dynamite and rocked them till they rolled,

      Just about, from bed to floor

      And then leaped up and got back into bed

      And troubled you no more

      For an hour or a day at a time.

      (2000)

      A. R. AMMONS (1926–2001)

      Their Sex Life

      One failure on

      Top of another

      (1990)

      PAUL BLACKBURN (1926–1971)

      The Once-Over

      The tanned blond

      in the green print sack

      in the center of the subway car

      standing

      tho there are seats

      has had it from

      1 teen-age hood

      1 lesbian

      1 envious housewife

      4 men over fifty

      (& myself), in short

      the contents of this half of the car

      Our notations are:

      long legs, long waists, high breasts (no bra), long

      neck, the model slump

      the handbag drape & how the skirt

      cuts in under a very handsome

      set of cheeks

      ‘stirring dull roots with spring rain’, sayeth the preacher

      Only a stolid young man

      with a blue business suit and the New York Times

      does not know he is being assaulted

      So.

      She has us and we her

      all the way to downtown Brooklyn

      Over the tunnel and through the bridge

      to DeKalb Avenue we go

      all very chummy

      She stares at the number over the door

      and gives no sign

      Yet the sign is on her

      (1958–1960)

      ALLEN GINSBERG (1926–1997)

      Love Poem on Theme by Whitman

      I’ll go into the bedroom silently and lie down between the bridegroom and the

      bride,

      those bodies fallen from heaven stretched out waiting naked and restless,

      arms resting over their eyes in the darkness,

      bury my face in their shoulders and breasts, breathing their skin,

      and stroke and kiss neck and mouth and make back be open and known,

      legs raised up crook’d to receive, cock in the darkness driven tormented and

      attacking

      rouse up from hole to itching head,

      bodies locked shuddering naked, hot lips and buttocks screwed into each other

      and eyes, eyes glinting and charming, widening into looks and abandon,

      and moans of movement, voices, hands in air, hands between thighs,

      hands in moisture on softened hips, throbbing contraction of bellies

      till the white come flow in the swirling sheets,

      and the bride cry for forgiveness, and the groom be covered with tears of

      passion and compassion,

      and I rise up from the bed replenished with last i
    ntimate gestures and kisses of

      farewell—

      all before the mind wakes, behind shades and closed doors in a darkened house

      where the inhabitants roam unsatisfied in the night,

      nude ghosts seeking each other out in the silence.

      (1963)

      JAMES MERRILL (1926–1995)

      Peeled Wands

      Peeled wands lead on the pedophile. Give me

      Experience—and your limbs the prize.

      Too scarred and seasoned for mere jeopardy

      Ever now to fell them, trunk and thighs

      Rampant among sheet lightning and the gruff

      Thunderclap be our shelter. Having both

      Outstripped the ax-women, enough

      Uneasy glances backward! Nothing loath!

      Roving past initial bliss and pain

      Visited upon you, I have gone bare

      Into the thicket of your kiss, and there

      Licked from that sly old hermit tongue—

      Life’s bacon not yet cured when we were young—

      Eternal oaths it swore with a salt-grain.

      (1988)

      FRANK O’HARA (1926–1966)

      To the Harbormaster

      I wanted to be sure to reach you;

      though my ship was on the way it got caught

      in some moorings. I am always tying up

      and then deciding to depart. In storms and

      at sunset, with the metallic coils of the tide

      around my fathomless arms, I am unable

      to understand the forms of my vanity

      or I am hard alee with my Polish rudder

      in my hand and the sun sinking. To

      you I offer my hull and the tattered cordage

      of my will. The terrible channels where

      the wind drives me against the brown lips

      of the reeds are not all behind me. Yet

      I trust the sanity of my vessel; and

      if it sinks, it may well be in answer

      to the reasoning of the eternal voices,

     


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