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The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 40. ...at the Jewel Box...
.
Finding the Action
This Elegy provides a rare emotional snapshot
of same-sex love from the straight side.
At Schneithorst’s you
tried to pick up
the car hop, a short
blond-haired girl
with buck teeth.
She ignored your comments
and hooked the tray
with our fries and shakes
to the window.
“Look at that—”
You rose up and
pointed at a girl
in a miniskirt
climbing out of the back
seat of a Mustang.
We could see the red
polka dots
on her panties
and the backs of her
long golden legs.
I put my hand
on your shoulder
and pulled you back.
“I want to get
laid real bad,”
you said.
How could I have prevented you
from saying what you felt,
or stopped us from growing apart?
Winding through
the narrow lanes
and curvy roads
past long rows
of neatly trimmed
hedges, stone
statues, timed
sprinklers flinging
hard drops
of water toward
the sloping edges
of lawn, we drove
to the Holmes’ house,
but Nan’s windows
were dark. “No action
here,” I said.
How could I have prevented you
from saying what you felt,
or stopped us from growing apart?
At the Jewel Box
in Forest Park
we sat in the car
with the doors open
and finished the last
of a bottle of Sloe Gin,
stolen from your
father’s liquor cabinet.
“Have you ever had
a really good
blow job?”
I was almost afraid
to look at you, afraid
to stare into the shining
wedge of your face.
“I can give you
a blow job,” you said,
“that will send you through
the roof of the car.”
How could I have prevented you
from saying what you felt,
or stopped us from growing apart?
I thought of the exotic
flowers behind the glass
walls, releasing
their perfumes to the dark,
of how the fragrant scents
grow so potent
they make a new
kind of air,
thick with sweetness;
of how jewels form
on the palms of the fibrous
green leaves
that sparkle
only a moment
before they burst.
How could I have prevented you
from saying what you felt,
or stopped us from growing apart?
Under the thick canopy
of the sycamores, their
trunks lit
by a milky flame,
I looked at your stained
lips, your palms
opening and closing.
Then I shoved the clutch
Into gear and patched out
on the tarry road,
and sticking my head out
the window, laughed
into the warm buggy
wind rushing into
my eyes and mouth.
How could I have prevented you
from saying what you felt,
and stopped us from growing apart.
Jeff Friedman,[i]
1997
[i] “Finding the Action” Jeff Friedman Taking Down the Angel, Poems (Pittsburgh 2003), ps. 79-82, subtitled: “(For G.C., who died of AIDS)”
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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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