~This poem previously appeared in Crab Orchard Review (2000)
IF I HAD POSSESSION OVER JUDGMENT DAY
Enough of God. Enough of witnesses.
O turn your face to the room's wall
And sing, poor Bob. O sing damnation
past drawn shades
More cracked with light than
mine. Bowls fill
With
melting ice; fan blades shift, dangerous
In the choked air. A man's brought you to Texas,
Twice, to needle songs—I went
To the mountain, looked as far as my eyes could see—
On waxy plates.
Brought you a pint,
And let's drink to that first crowd's sweaty laughs,
Also your last girlfriend's. O vengeful solo:
You didn't like the way she done
And swore
she'd have no right to pray.
Tears prick my throat
As if you'd damned me too, as
one
Who makes her songs from scaredy-cat bravado
And flirts with others' dues. Enough of love—
Aren't we both vagrants of the
South,
You born from
autumn trysts, black knees splayed in high cotton;
I from a history of shut
mouths
And families gone? Lead me beyond the eaves
Of sleeping women's shacks, where you once stayed
Till dawn, your fingers muting
still
The knife-edged
chords that beckon toward a possessed heart . . .
Mine's followed you to Texan
hell,
Though walls melt down to echoes as you play
And curse God's vast shining back: don't throw me out.
Here's another pint.
Another hymn
From a white girl
whose call craves your response, shades drawn
Against false stars . .
. Trouble gon' come:
Lead me, like whiskey and wept judgments, down.
*****