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Paint left, humidity purgatory, Sticky but practically peeled off, while Water and lime, the kind you hear about On infomercials promising to rid You of Built Up **** is trapped between the Panes they said they replaced but I don’t know. Clothes piled with invisible coatings of Dust from the floor last swept ten years ago, And sweat from leaving the AC off (Because saving a few bucks is worth it), And sweat in stained dresses when you touched me, And sweat in damp briefs when I touched myself. Paper stacks, three years, busy work And scholastic articles I should Have read, say I will, but won’t pick up, And verses I wrote that go nowhere but Here and to a real poet, happily Trapped at an average liberal arts college. So instead of dressing or cleaning I Call you, naked, a fattened odalisque, Silent for hours, my thin mouth, a suture. A fit black girl cut across the dog park, She saw my bare shoulders, sloped pudgy pale, We gazed in the other’s faces, but now I can’t think what she wore, and she knows I’m just sad, still: a ghost in the windows.
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May 9, 2014
May 9, 2014 at 6:21 PM UTC
Portrait of the Artist in the First Days of Summer
Paint left, humidity purgatory, Sticky but practically peeled off, while Water and lime, the kind you hear about On infomercials promising to rid You of Built Up **** is trapped between the Panes they said they replaced but I don’t know. Clothes piled with invisible coatings of Dust from the floor last swept ten years ago, And sweat from leaving the AC off (Because saving a few bucks is worth it), And sweat in stained dresses when you touched me, And sweat in damp briefs when I touched myself. Paper stacks, three years, busy work And scholastic articles I should Have read, say I will, but won’t pick up, And verses I wrote that go nowhere but Here and to a real poet, happily Trapped at an average liberal arts college. So instead of dressing or cleaning I Call you, naked, a fattened odalisque, Silent for hours, my thin mouth, a suture. A fit black girl cut across the dog park, She saw my bare shoulders, sloped pudgy pale, We gazed in the other’s faces, but now I can’t think what she wore, and she knows I’m just sad, still: a ghost in the windows.
molly-smithson-callahan
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May 9, 2014
May 9, 2014 at 6:21 PM UTC
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