By Rae Rose
My history professor - in your adorable
black shirts and that strange click
of your jaw that made you so thirsty.
You said, "A one world Utopia sounds genocidal"
and I almost dropped my pen.
You blushed when you cursed, called my writing a joy
and snuck looks down my cleavage in your office.
Room Q 19, fourth floor.
Your wife grows peppers and keeps chickens.
She asks you to go to the store when you're out of plums.
Saxophone player - all dimple,
all clever smile.
You loved my hair short and curly, drank with me at the bar
and your wife never came to a show,
well, once.
Once she did. In tennis shoes with the laces
untied and huge white tube socks
and I called her "Socks" to feel better about myself,
but it didn't work. You told me about your quiet Halloween,
cuddling and handing candy out to kids
and I can't imagine her like that,
but I'm wrong. I hate that memory. Yours.
Kevin Beck in 1st - 8th grade.
We were the funny redheads.
The first note you wrote to me as an adult
was from jail. You shot a cop.
I stared at the return address. You said you missed me.
Everything was misspelled. There wasn't any punctuation.
I wrote back. You didn't.
The man who called me "Honey." Just that sound! Honey.
You bought me dresses and nachos.
I didn't love you either.
You call me now, back from France
and a mental break down. Your therapist says hi.
Oh Freddie, you idiot.
Published in The Raleigh Review, October 2010
This poem is spot on about how I'm feeling these days - so many old loves, mostly unrequited, that left me wondering if I were the fool or they. Thanks so much for sharing. It was a blessing to read.
ReplyDeleteI'm stealing for my blog. hope you don't mind - evolutionofpaper.blogspot.com
ps...I absolutely adore your blog! poetry is meant to be shared.
That's fine to re-post the poem, but please give proper attribution to Rae Rose, the poet, and also to the journal who published it. Since small journals are always struggling to stay afloat, I think we should support them anyway we can. This poem is up in the website for Raleigh Review right now.
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