Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 44. ...Comic Book Heroes I...
.
Comic Book Heroes I
And I began
to realize
I was different
when I noticed
none of the guys
in the comic books
ever fell in love
with their friends.
+
I was all giggles
and happiness
with him
there beside me
both of us writing
a thousand times each:
I must not do naughty things
with my classmatein the bathroom.
I must not do naughty things
with my classmate
in the bathroom.
I must not do naughty things
with my classmate
in the bathroom.
+
I went alone
to the movies one afternoon
and took a seat
beside a boy there,
and little by little
while Prince Charming
kissed Sleeping Beauty
I closed my eyes,
filled with the kind of hope
common to kids of seven.
+
“That kid’s queer,”
they said.
Without asking
what the word meant,
I went home
and under covers
printed
with Walt Disney characters,
I spent
my first sleepless night.
+
Victor Manuel
was delicate and gentle.
There was a tenderness
in the way
he looked at his classmates,
and they,
bothered by it,
kicked him, threatened him,
mocked him.
They beat the hell out of him
because he had a limp wrist.
Scared, terrified,
I looked on with my own hands
crammed deep in my pockets.
I don’t know what
may have become of him,
but when they hit him then
he cried.
He stayed behind
cleaning up his face
among the desks
in the classroom,
alone,
and I like one of his tormentors
walked away.
I was afraid
they might discover the warmth
in my gaze too.
And they were
proud of themselves
for having taught a queer
a lesson.
I don’t know what
may have become of him.
I’d like to see him again,
changed a little.
Maybe I’d like to see him cry
a bit more,
and then, I think,
I’d like to see him
take a knife
and murder his tormentors
and cut them to shreds
and scatter the shreds all over
the goddamned school,
in all the classrooms,
and in the Chapel
of the Sacred Heart
which prohibits crime.
—Ernesto Bañuelos Enríquez,[i]
1978
[i] “Comic Book Heroes I” Ernesto Bañuelos Enríquez, from “The Story of Myself and Some Friends in These Fragments of Daily Loves” reprinted in Now the Volcano: An Anthology of Latin American Gay Literature [Winston Leyland, Editor] (San Francisco 1979), ps.71-75
_
- 6
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Recommended Comments
Chapter Comments
-
Newsletter
Sign Up and get an occasional Newsletter. Fill out your profile with favorite genres and say yes to genre news to get the monthly update for your favorite genres.