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    The Best American Erotic Poems

    Page 9
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      the waves which have kept me from reaching you.

      (1954)

      DAVID WAGONER (BORN 1926)

      Trying to Write a Poem While the Couple in the Apartment Overhead Make Love

      She’s like a singer straying slowly off-key

      While trying too hard to remember the words to a song

      Without words, and her accompanist

      Is metronomically dead set

      To sustain her pitch and tempo, and meanwhile

      Under their feathers and springs, under their carpet,

      Under my own ceiling, I try to go on

      Making something or other out of nothing

      But those missing words, whose rhythm is only

      Predictable for unpredictable moments

      And then erratic, unforeseeable even

      At its source where it ought to be abundantly,

      Even painfully clear. A song is a series of vowels

      Interrupted and shaped by harder consonants

      And silence, and gifted singers say, if you can

      Pronounce words and remember how to breathe,

      You can sing. Although I know some words by heart

      And think I know how to breathe (even down here

      At work alone) and may be able sometimes

      To write some of them down, right now it seems

      Improbable they’ll have anything much like

      The permissive diction, the mounting cadences,

      Now, or then or now again the suspended

      Poise, the drift backward, the surprise

      Of the suddenly almost soundless catch

      Of the caught breath, the quick

      Loss of support

      Which wasn’t lost at all as it turns out

      But found again and even again

      Somewhere, in midair, far, far above me.

      (2006)

      GALWAY KINNELL (BORN 1927)

      Last Gods

      She sits naked on a rock

      a few yards out in the water.

      He stands on the shore,

      also naked, picking blueberries.

      She calls. He turns. She opens

      her legs showing him her great beauty,

      and smiles, a bow of lips

      seeming to tie together

      the ends of the earth.

      Splashing her image

      to pieces, he wades out

      and stands before her, sunk

      to the anklebones in leaf-mush

      and bottom-slime—the intimacy

      of the visible world. He puts

      a berry in its shirt

      of mist into her mouth.

      She swallows it. He puts in another.

      She swallows it. Over the lake

      two swallows whim, juke, jink,

      and when one snatches

      an insect they both whirl up

      and exult. He is swollen

      not with ichor but with blood.

      She takes him and sucks him

      more swollen. He kneels, opens

      the dark, vertical smile

      linking heaven with the underearth

      and licks her smoothest flesh more smooth.

      On top of the rock they join.

      Somewhere a frog moans, a crow screams.

      The hair of their bodies

      startles up. They cry

      in the tongue of the last gods,

      who refused to go,

      chose death, and shuddered

      in joy and shattered in pieces,

      bequeathing their cries

      into the human mouth. Now in the lake

      two faces float, looking up

      at a great maternal pine whose branches

      open out in all directions

      explaining everything.

      (1990)

      DONALD HALL (BORN 1928)

      When I Was Young

      When I was young and sexual

      I looked forward to a cool Olympian age

      for release from my obsessions.

      Ho, ho, ho. At sixty the body’s one desire

      sustains my pulse, not to mention

      my groin, as much as it ever did, if not quite

      so often. When I gaze at your

      bottom as you bend gardening, or at your breasts,

      or at your face with its helmet

      of sensuous hair, or at your eyes proposing

      the text of our next encounter,

      my attention departs from history, baseball,

      food, poetry, and deathless fame.

      Let us pull back the blanket, slide off our

      bluejeans, assume familiar positions,

      and celebrate lust in Mortality Mansions.

      (1993)

      ANNE SEXTON (1928–1974)

      December 11th

      Then I think of you in bed,

      your tongue half chocolate, half ocean,

      of the houses that you swing into,

      of the steel wool hair on your head,

      of your persistent hands and then

      how we gnaw at the barrier because we are two.

      How you come and take my blood cup

      and link me together and take my brine.

      We are bare. We are stripped to the bone

      and we swim in tandem and go up and up

      the river, the identical river called Mine

      and we enter together. No one’s alone.

      (1967)

      RICHARD HOWARD (BORN 1929)

      Move Still, Still So

      for Sanford Friedman

      Now that I am nearly sixty, I venture to do very unconventional things.

      —Lewis Carroll

      1925

      …bothers me, Doctor, more than the rest,

      more than anything

      I’ve told you so far—

      anything, that is, I could tell you.

      You see, I have this

      feeling, actually

      a need…I don’t know what to call it—yes,

      that’s right, tendency :

      you know what I mean,

      you always know, I suppose that’s why

      I’m here at all or

      why I keep coming

      back to you when nothing ever seems

      to change…I have this

      “tendency” to lie

      perfectly still when he wants me to

      let him inside me,

      all of a sudden

      I turn passive—how I hate that word!

      I mean I don’t feel

      anything is wrong,

      but it always happens, just before…

      I suppose nothing

      private is really

      shocking, so long as it remains yours,

      but I wish I knew

      if other women

      felt this way. I mean, it seems as if

      once he’s in there I’m

      waiting for something.

      The stillness bothers me. Why can’t I

      accept it? Not what

      he’s doing there, but

      the stillness: I can’t bear it. Why is that?

      1895

      And was it my fault

      it rained Gladyses

      and globes? Quite right of Mrs. Grundy,

      sending you to bed

      one whole day before

      your usual time, and since you broke

      the window, making

      you mend it yourself

      with a needle and thread…Now, Gladys,

      don’t fidget so much,

      listen to what I say;

      I know ways of fixing a restless

      child for photographs:

      I wedge her, standing,

      into the corner of a room, or

      if she’s lying down,

      into the angle

      of a sofa. Gladys child, look here

      into the lens, and

      I’ll tell you something…

      All these years, Doctor, and I never

      knew: was I having

      it or wasn’t I?

      What I thoug
    ht I was supposed to have

      wasn’t what he thought

      I should be having,

      and to this day I don’t think he knows,

      or any man knows—

      do you know, Doctor?

      Does it matter if you know or not?

      How could a man know—

      how or even when

      a woman has such things for herself.

      Men all imagine

      it’s the same as theirs,

      and of course they think there’s only one…

      is something inside

      people, not anything from outside.

      To borrow a word

      from Mrs. Grundy,

      there must be a knot tied in the thread

      before we can sew.

      Your pose is my knot,

      and this camera my way to sew…

      Did you ever see

      a needle so huge?

      Of course, having such a thing at home

      is preposterous:

      it is by having

      preposterous possessions that one can

      keep them at arm’s length…

      Before it happens

      I don’t move, almost not breathing at all,

      and I think it’s that,

      the lack of response

      he gets discouraged by. He thinks I’m

      dead. I wouldn’t mind

      letting on, Doctor,

      but if it happens I just can’t speak—

      I can’t even move.

      He thinks it happens

      only when I pretend it happens…

      Now that I’ve made friends

      with a real Princess,

      I don’t intend ever to speak to

      any more children

      who haven’t titles;

      but perhaps you have a title, dear,

      and you don’t know it.

      I’m cantankerous,

      but not about that sort of thing—about

      cooking and grammar

      and dresses and dogs…

      Sometimes I pretend—to save his pride

      and prevent a row.

      It seems politer,

      that way: why be rude about such things?

      Now try it a few

      minutes like that, child.

      Lovely, lovely—one hardly sees why

      this little princess

      should ever need be

      covered up by dreadful crinolines.

      Much better that way.

      Princess Perdita,

      have I told you about her, Gladys?

      the one in the Tale

      from Shakespeare, who thought

      she was a shepherdess, when in fact

      she was a real live

      princess all the time!

      It can happen, and it does, without

      tremendous effort,

      but unless I take

      control and make it the way I want,

      it won’t work at all…

      At a certain point

      I have to stop trying to fool him

      and focus all my

      forces on myself.

      There must be a feeling that the waves

      will come to a crest

      —higher waves. Doctor,

      sometimes it seems like too much trouble…

      When the prince saw her—

      not doing anything,

      just being herself, singing a song

      and dancing a bit

      at the sheep-shearing,

      you know what he told her? Now listen!

      What you do, he said,

      not even guessing

      she was a princess, and Perdita

      not knowing either,

      still betters what is done. When you speak

      I’d have you do it ever, when you sing

      I’d have you buy and sell so, so give alms,

      and for the ordering of your affairs,

      to sing them too. When you do dance, I wish you

      a wave of the sea, that you might ever do

      nothing but that, move still, still so,

      and own no other function…

      Of course it’s entirely personal—

      there’s no way to share

      what happens to me,

      but I like it that he’s there. I always

      want to keep my eyes

      open, I do try

      to make myself feel that much closer

      to him, but meanwhile

      all I’m conscious of—

      the only thing, to tell the truth, is

      my own pleasure. There!

      That time I said it,

      my own pleasure : that is what it is!

      And you’ll see, Gladys,

      that’s what photographs

      can do, make you a wave of the sea

      that you might ever

      do nothing but that…

      So very soon the child-face is gone

      forever, sometimes

      it is not even

      there in children—hired models are

      plebeian, they have

      thick ankles and tend

      to be heavy, which I cannot admire.

      And of course I must

      have little girls, you know

      I do not admire naked little boys

      in pictures—they seem

      to need clothes, always,

      whereas one hardly sees why the forms

      of little girls should

      ever be covered.

      I can’t make it happen without the right

      imagining. Sometimes

      I can’t bring it off

      and I cast around in my mind for

      proper images—

      rather improper,

      I’m afraid. I may manage to keep

      high and dry by day

      but with the last light

      I venture into the water, all

      that white froth fainting

      out into darkness—

      as if the world had become one wave…

      Stockings, even these

      lovely ones, seem to me

      such a pity when a child like you has

      (as is not always

      the case) well-shaped calves.

      Yes, that’s it. I think we might venture

      to face Mrs. Grundy

      to the extent of

      making a fairy’s clothes transparent?

      I think Mrs. G

      might be fairly well

      content to find a fairy dressed at all…

      I know it isn’t

      supposed to matter,

      but whoever said it wasn’t so

      important for women

      must have been a man!

      There we are, ready. Now Gladys, dear,

      I want you to lie

      still, perfectly still.

      I’ll help you do it, but the impulse

      must be your own. Three

      minutes of perfect

      stillness will do for both you and me…

      I always feel cheated whenever

      it happens to him

      and not to me too.

      I treasure those glimpses of the waves

      and the high white foam.

      I am suspended

      before they fall. Doctor, what happens

      in that one moment

      of timeless suspense?

      I feel cast up, out of life, held there

      and then down, broken

      on the rocks, tossed back,

      part of the ebb and the flow. Doctor,

      would you mind if I

      just lay here, quite still

      for a moment? Just this one time, still…

      (1984)

      ADRIENNE RICH (BORN 1929)

      (The Floating Poem, Unnumbered)

      Whatever happens with us, your body

      will haunt mine—tender, delicate

      your lovemaking, like the half-curled frond

      of the fiddlehead fern in forests

      just washed by sun. Your traveled, generous thighs


      between which my whole face has come and come—

      the innocence and wisdom of the place my tongue has found there—

      the live, insatiate dance of your nipples in my mouth—

      your touch on me, firm, protective, searching

      me out, your strong tongue and slender fingers

      reaching where I had been waiting years for you

      in my rose-wet cave—whatever happens, this is.

      (1978)

      SYLVIA PLATH (1932–1963)

      The Beekeeper’s Daughter

      A garden of mouthings. Purple, scarlet-speckled, black

      The great corollas dilate, peeling back their silks.

      Their musk encroaches, circle after circle,

      A well of scents almost too dense to breathe in.

      Hieratical in your frock coat, maestro of the bees,

      You move among the many-breasted hives,

      My heart under your foot, sister of a stone.

      Trumpet-throats open to the beaks of birds.

      The Golden Rain Tree drips its powders down.

      In these little boudoirs streaked with orange and red

      The anthers nod their heads, potent as kings

      To father dynasties. The air is rich.

      Here is a queenship no mother can contest—

      A fruit that’s death to taste: dark flesh, dark parings.

      In burrows narrow as a finger, solitary bees

      Keep house among the grasses. Kneeling down

      I set my eye to a hole-mouth and meet an eye

      Round, green, disconsolate as a tear.

      Father, bridegroom, in this Easter egg

      Under the coronal of sugar roses

      The queen bee marries the winter of your year.

      (1959)

      JOHN UPDIKE (BORN 1932)

      Fellatio

      It is beautiful to think

      that each of these clean secretaries

      at night, to please her lover, takes

      a fountain into her mouth

      and lets her insides, drenched in seed,

      flower into landscapes:

      meadows sprinkled with baby’s breath,

      hoarse twiggy woods, birds dipping, a multitude

      of skies containing clouds, plowed earth stinking

     


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