Ex libris
Browsing
on the bargain shelf …
A
school book anthology whose leaves
Thickened
the dust on the shelves
Of
adolescent minds in Tottenville High,
Staten
Island 7, N.Y.
I see
cheerleaders – rah-rah skirts,
Thighs
as pink, as firm, as prosthetics.
I see
jocks, jaws as square as photo-fits,
Lettermen
strutting in their varsity jackets,
Their
skin a size too small for their musculature,
Their
minds gripped by the image of pudenda clutched
In taut
white panty-gussets; Feminine rime
Grinding
against the masculine scheme.
Such
urgent, relentless desires:
Dreams
scored in flesh and fire.
Turned
cold now. Lost your bottle;
Hope’s
sunk like a ship scuttled.
Doctors
now, teachers, fathers and mothers;
Or drug
addicts, alcoholics, death-row murderers.
And the
poetry’s mostly gone from our lives,
The
lust too, though, maybe, some love survives,
And for
those who moved on, who were dauntless,
Perhaps,
they’ve acquired some rhythmic, prosaic happiness.
… I reveal
something cheap about myself.
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