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The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 95. Seven Poems by Walt Curtis
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Seven Poems by Walt Curtis
Levi’s
Because your ass looks good in levis,
always wear them.
they shrink to fit.
When I unbutton bright metal buttons,
my flustered fingers, pubic curls,
and the curve of your ass shows.
Slapping down hands, smooth on fingers,
the contrast – blue cloth
against white bare thighs – kills me.
Blue jeans and pecker tracks.
The hot rivets, next to the campfire,
burns dots in the skin
sometimes against my penis. Jump back!
A teenager, one of the first times spunk
I will remember always
on my faded levis milky white fluid.
Soft clouds in a blue summer sky.
Shaman Ritual at Sunburst Canyon
Shaman Michael drumming
at the river. The most beautiful sight
in all creation. Handsome
long-haired youth standing proud
stark naked before Mother Earth.
Drumming up his dreams. Otherworldly,
contact on the ribbed rock, inside
the whorl of the Sunburst on the
Molalla. His spirit place, he said.
Pool mirrored the ribbed rock and
whorl of magma. In class, a woman
shaman took him on a journey to
the underworld entrance. He rode
a horse, but still didn’t find his
animal helper. But his place of
power was here. His guide to the site
me. Both having swam naked here
in the past, smoked pot, sunbathed.
My glorious Michael in the pride
of young manhood. We hallucinated
on the clabbered clouds, flying high
above the firs. He asked me,
“Can we camp overnight here sometime?”
“Sure,” I replied. My heart beating
faster than the drum. How could
the cosmos give me such a lovely
friend? Soul son. May I be worthy
of his trust and love, O Goddess.
O World Mother, protect us both,
nurture our friendship. Please I beg.
I promise to be worthy even unto death.
We laughed, we were stunned when the
horse-hide drum suddenly lost its timbre.
How? Why? Michael’s long wet hair
moistened the shaman’s music into silence.
O Goddess, your powers and energies
are everywhere.
Raul
Raul, gentle boy of Mexico,
I miss you, seashells on
your wrist, mule teeth on a string
around your neck. Sun-bleached, blondish
boy, you came north to seek
something, someone, maybe me,
maybe your own adventurous self.
I loved your slender body,
tender growing beauty, wrestling
playfully on the mattress on the floor,
smoking dope. Pinkish t-shirt. Liquid eyes
gently and psychicly stoned.
“Que ondas?” You asked me,
“What are the waves? How are the vibes?”
I loved you like a lover –
and when that didn’t work out –
like a son. A young friend.
You stored your belongings in my room,
in my car. I nearly cried
when you knocked on my window
in the middle of the night
after a long stowawayed freight-
train ride from Chicago.
A mistake. Your face freckled
and speckled by poisonous chemicals
from the freezing boxcar. Ragged clothes
greasy and eaten by acid.
You had got on the wrong trip north.
I made you shower, held you
in my arms in the bed, and then cooked breakfast.
What a hungry youth, with
a sense of humor, slow, laconic
body, walking ingenuously
along the dirty street.
Coming to check me out
and bum some grass – you
loved to smoke that home-grown dope –
we spar, and joke, and play around.
You are one of the loveliest humans
I have met in my life.
As I write this, I want you near me.
It was so easy and affectionate then. Now
there is a sadness and aching emptiness
which fills my body. You are back in Mexico, I guess,
and I miss you often and think of you often,
and there is no way to touch you.
Raul, will you return?
My long, lanky boy with sun-bleached hair
and an air of delicacy about you.
After you left, in February, a letter
came from Tijuana. From your sister, Rosa.
She sounded worried and longed to see you.
Here are the last three lines in blue ink:
“Se despide tu hermana que desea verte
y todo alla en la casa desea verte.
Contestame pronto Saludos.”
“Your sister takes leave of you and desires
to see you and all here at home want to see you.
Answer me right away.”
The Soft Rain
Something is sensuous about the soft rain,
and sad.
Like a string of – not pearls –
but hot tears
plucked from the ocean depths,
pried from the oysters of your eyes.
I, the poor lover, made you cry.
Everytime it rains like this,
I realize that.
I am the deep-sea diver
who opened your eyes,
a flood of salty vision.
Those signals of your SOS,
such jeweled distress,
do not reach me
at forty fathoms deep.
No.
Only the soft drops of rain on my face
when I rise to the surface
allow me to recall the look, the place,
a lover’s disgrace.
Seeded by flakes of grit,
your body remains
on the bottom of life’s ocean.
Not Murine, no lotion soothes the ache.
Touching my face, the soft rain
is like the sobbing of a seashell
pressed to my ear and dripping hair.
Crab Man Loves You
Crab man loves you,
crab man thrives upon you.
He claws his way across
the ocean floor, looking for
the soft parts of your belly,
your guts and thighs and butt
and soft wiggly plushy toes
always moving in a toe-dance, in a toe-jam
of rapacious delight.
To the changes of the moon
his movements become more erratic,
hard-shelled, scrabbly
like the soft clatter of cat nails on the kitchen floor.
When he finds you, you like a mermaid,
with your breasts exposed
leaning back against a reef of sharp coral
exhausted and panting, in passionate fear,
he will change into a gentle octopus,
or giant golden sea urchin,
again transforming into the handsomest
underwater prince, Greek boy,
sensually muscled Neptune, Davy Jones,
Hawaiian beach boy surfer type, strumming a soft ukulele,
your eyes have ever spied upon.
He will tenderly take you in his smoky-tanned arms,
rocking you to the romantic lullaby of the deep,
music of the deep, green, green,
and your terror will become
the most intense throbbing love,
like the changes of the moon,
like the awful suddenness of a tropic typhoon.
Crab man loves you. Crab man thrives upon you
My Greek Friend
My Greek friend is like My Sin.
A kind of sexual perfume
exudes from behind his ears.
His fingers are slender
and sensitive to human vibration
like a preying mantis’s.
His hair black and blue and lightly oiled
like a gun barrel,
and all the brightness and browness of a sea
sparkles in the twinkling of an eye.
When he explodes in laughter,
he is like a horse coughing.
He is like a stallion darkly prancing,
a gentle colt, sturdy and steady as a Cyprian donkey.
Philos mu. Mandrahalo. Malaka.
If he would only say, Kiss me,
and kiss me
or playfully slap my face
with his touchy quick and delicate fingers;
I would write a poem about our friendship,
about peasants and pistachio,
about Castoria and carnivals of love.
Ouzo, heavy and sweetly sullen as licorice.
About the self, like a city of white-washed houses
with terraces and fragrant transparent air,
surrounded by the wilderness mountains of Macedonia.
If you read and understand Kazantzakis,
perhaps you have a soul.
Perhaps you are a genius or a genii.
Whose inner fires burn hot and white
as the low and pulsating bonfires of stars
above your mountain village.
Spilling out all the miraculous brilliance
of eleutheria e thanatos,
eros or nero.
I am malaka. I am Sokrates sucking cock,
and all the brightness and browness of the sea
sparkles in the twinkling of his eye.
Lost Glasses
I dream of my lost glasses
flying across the continent,
streaming above the North Pole.
A Mongolian picks them up in the snow
and finds his way out if a blinding blizzard.
On a desert island,
they are found amidst seashells
sparkling supine to the mermaid
who never herself allows to be seen,
but now she appears and smilingly nakedly.
Africa; a person, for the first time,
counts numbers melodically, methodically
marking on a blackboard, with my glasses on.
Children will find them
sometime in the faraway future
and will see what I saw with my eyes
and feel what I felt, life-is-good looks,
with my heart. Life is good books.
And my heart in the grave
will get a new pair and put them on,
looking just like a turnip with spectacles
palpitating.
Whole new visions for the world and the world’s humans
because I have lost my sight,
my four eyes, my eyes with wings.
_
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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.
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