Monday, October 15, 2012

Lucretia ...after Rembrandt van Rijn’s painting


I.

I will tell you because
only you will understand:

Sextus had me first.

with me, he was silent;
he offered no threat,
did not fool me--
I just gave in.

gave in.

what do you call it, Lucretia?
surrender?
submission?
choice?

now we both know: there is no choice.


II.

there is a sense of self-betrayal,
a gasp in your chest
when you look at my bed;
the scent on your dress, always,
a handful of spit and sweat,
the tragic film of memory.

there is the fight to not remember
when you were younger,
when you fell asleep in the arms of God,
and he loved you more
than you will e v e r know again.


III.

here is how you work, Lucretia:
you lie
and you take it.

(but I took it, then I lied.)

like a good wife, you told your husband,
and your husband consoled you:

you did not sin because your body did not sin.
your body did not sin because your mind did not sin.
and your mind did not sin because
you did not feel pleasure.
(then pleasure must be sin)


IV.

let me tell you a secret:
some nights I dream about Sextus,
and I think I would like to love him.

I think I would like for him to love me.

here is another secret:
I wish he had kissed me.
did he kiss you, Lucretia?

I would rot with jealousy.


V.

what does sin feel like to you, Lucretia?
does it feel like pleasure?
or does it feel like guilt?

both and also something in between:
a void with anxiety
panging from within.

we’re supposed to be scared 
of these things, Lucretia:
the strong arms with the gentle hands
the breath in our ears on the verge of sleep

but to find solace,
we must find comfort.


VI.

comfort is the ghost I hold at night,
wanting, wishing it would hold me back.

fear is waking in damp sheets,
forgetting where I came from,
remembering where I am.


VII.

guilt was two weapons on the table before you:

silence and the knife

I admire you for choosing the latter, Lucretia,
because I chose the sharper,

though we both chose tools of strife.

now everything I have felt each night
you feel in this single moment

while I still have many nights left to go--

so dig that knife in hard, Lucretia
take it all in one blow

© Katherine Freeman, 2012


Rembrandt's Lucretia, 1666
Photo from Wikimedia Commons
Painting in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts

Monday, October 1, 2012

Rank


Something there is that is rotten in the state of state
that imposes the doorman’s snappy salute to the uptown patron;
      leaves the frazzled waitress to grovel for a tip;
      requires genuflection as the lawn-mower man
scraps for yard-work from the landed
      mandates a nod of submission in the workplace.
Something there is that is rank.

Congress can pass laws yet gravity never yields.
The somebodies define the nobodies as sure as 
the earth whirls through the cosmos.

Something there is that is rotten in this state of flux
that pinches the wallet and soul as a new Lexus rolls off the lot;
        tears at the heart as the face sags and the butt balloons;
        shreds all our dignity as we don the faddish blouse made in
  sweat or slurp the coffee grown for pesos, sold for dollars;
        diminishes as we venerate the half witted celebs we see on TV.
Something there is that is rank.

Somebody will see all this status anxiety as silly. 
Somebody will realize nobody is a nobody. 
Some will some day, I am quite sure.

Something there is that is rotten in the state of affairs
that sets the wild-eyed beggar-man to spinning for the ‘bus fare’;
      demands of the happy bride a vow to love and to obey;
      forces the fragile, uniformed maid to make the careful show of
deference to her subtle employer as she dusts the tabletop;
      gnaws at the plumber as he bends over in ill fitting jeans.
Something there is that is rank.

© Byron Harris, 2012 

Waitress serving in a restaurant while wearing a chicken costume
Photo by Ross Berteig, Wikimedia Commons