by Dana Levin
And blush for a cheek of stone.
Blush for the lips sewn tight with thread, no speech
for the dead
maker—
You’ve got the razor. You can make each suture
snap.
And watch the mouth
bloom up with foam,
as if he’d drowned himself in soap—
You lift the neck and let the head drop back.
The mouth yawns wide its prize—
White thrive.
The larval joy.
Hot in their gorge on the stew of balms,
a moist exhale—
as if there were a last breath, a taunt
coiling
into your inner ear, Good Dog, you dig your hands in,
up-cupping
the glossal
bed—
saying, Graduate
of the School of Flesh,
Father Conspirator—
I will learn it.
I will bite the tongue from the corpse.
Last updated November 17, 2022