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a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 10           Page 26

I regret

we ever met,

coming out of a Rascals concert,

both of us smiling, suffused with the music,

critical abilities in abeyance

as we followed the crowd into the subway.

Plus, okay, a little high.

Even rats express regret; one can see it

in their brain scans.

I regret I left my college, when I was

almost through, to follow him to the Midwest.

How non-vested with judgment the young are.

Maybe I should have had

that baby, the one I thought I’d have to

carry to work and plunk down

in a cardboard box,

my gamble on perfect behavior.

I regret I stayed with him too long,

because the leaving was hard for me.

How can I reconcile the man who smashed

walls, dishes, broke all my love,

and then when I left, grabbed

all our cash,

with the man who carried

abandoned dogs out of apartments

in the wake of 9-11?

I can’t think about him without

thinking of the counterfactual.

Where is he now and what is his version

of if only?

Illusion

At first, I think I see

a white palace,

in this countryside

of palaces.

 

Getting closer,

I see it is a strange

arrangement of fuel tanks,

the way far-off fields

 

of olive trees reveal

themselves to be hackberry.

So many mirages

in the silt,

 

incandescence in the arid

wind, the light,

like all light,

playing tricks.

© CTvM: Fijn 2023

Bundling

—a colonial variant of premarital, non-penetrative sex and courtship

How one goes sparking:

night clothes, repose,

fabric sack

in the sweetness

of dark, early-to-bed

husbandry of firewood,

drawstring that closes

the bag the girl

is wrapped in.

Her parents tucked

them in. She lies awake,

listens to his breathing.

Scarcely a word

exchanged, but

conversation is in

the touch. There’s

temptation in the cold,

and that centerboard

which parts them,

unyielding plank.

Straight Hair

I prefer it straight,

the boyfriends always

prattled. Old story.

My friend advised me,

for curly white-girl hair:

Leave it on for less time

than the box instructs.

Lye to wreck

the protein bond, to relax

the coils, hopefully

not break many strands,

though always, filaments

of evidence appeared

in the sink after a rinse.

I could never win that battle,

eyes pink and watery

from the sulfur smell.

When I wasn’t trying

to scare my hair

into a steady course,

I fantasized it

blowing in the wind,

along with the answers

to everything. I was going

for the folksinger look,

as if split ends

made up for how

hopelessly I carried a tune.

Rubber Chicken

At a dinner party

eating awful

chicken I thought

might be soy,

back when I was a sociologist,

I got seated next to

a dentist who put his hand

on my thigh and asked

what I did,

then, waving his knife,

blamed me

for ruining the world.

Who knew I channeled

Loviatar, daughter

of the god of death,

the one who gives birth

to plague, tries to steal

the sun, moon, and stars.

I said, yeah, that’s me,

and I wasn’t even wearing

a low-cut dress.

Now that I write poems,

it’s not only the dentists

that are off-put

at parties, so yes, I confess.

I did it.

I follow in the footsteps

of those who broke

the line

and stanza.

I killed the world.

Destructive bitch—

my middle name.

I’ve been smashing things up

for years.

Meat Chandelier

A Venetian blown glass chandelier,

its sculpted cuts—

Deborah Czeresko’s sausage links,

chops, pinkish kitsch,

no flowered frills.

Calabria Pork Store

on Arthur Avenue in the Bronx

uses real flesh for its phallic

ceiling’s chandelier arms—

like an Australian BBQ

candelabrum bearing three thousand

pounds of low and slow.

And then there’s the sexist slang 

for gangbang: meat chandelier.

Bukkake, Japanese for splash,

a pornographic gangbang genre,

gets around heavy censorship

by showing ejaculate, faces,

but no baloney pony.

Why a queer glassmaker

makes a meat chandelier:

salami as feminist. Glass

Czeresko calls the great equalizer.

Her fat-fingered

fuck you to the male blowers.

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