Poems

Maggie Golston

Some mornings sin sings

 I beg bars, dig lockout.

One likes the spit or hemorrhage, matte

pools at the cunning blisters.

Not until digging

are we alive.

 

Beg these bars to dig into my arm,

beg this operation not

to stop me. Pills dig

this minuet

of hanging fast to the breakers,

a far banging against ice.

I had milk, talk

until I begged. Then a sliding.

 

Of blurs of focus I pen arcs,

dark hairshirts not an elevation,

but arbitrary and mine.

From far places, say welcome, my dregs,

for you come until beaten I hang hid.

 

Men live a bare clarity

that comes over me like pills,

my vague voice

a far din and falter,

‘Far away my good mood,  mother,

and night my hair. I will do good

all the same.’

 

And dragging come hands, traitors, hymns

of arbitration.

One slides off there

at signified singsong,

makes tracks. Verify my tongue

as far dead.

Hands lift up or crumple

and these hands are altered.

‘The blur is stronger, little lady,

harbors will, drugs you like music.’

 

A naked man, his own voice

coming to mind

after bed and tablets.

‘Our hair is dead before we’re born.’

Men not like objects,

that’s a glass page

 

 

with jagged ends for digging,

I’m locked out at strong tide.

I’ll give you my hold, my duration,

my drink

of gin or frayed vodka;

you make believe I return,

 

my hands some jug of good.

For under these clothes

is a small, drugged star,

a gilded whore,

a cinder.

 

These pages last modified September 2, 2007.

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