Friday, April 8, 2022

blessed ground

I don't think there has been enough queer poetry yet this month, but obviously I am going to change that. I first encountered Danez Smith through an entirely different poem—"Tonight, in Oakland," which is wonderful—and then I tracked down some more of their poetry, as one does, and totally fell for this one.

this gin-heavy heaven, blessed ground to think gay & mean we.
bless the fake id & the bouncer who knew
this need to be needed, to belong, to know how
a man taste full on vodka & free of sin. i know not which god to pray to.
i look to christ, i look to every mouth on the dance floor, i order
a whiskey coke, name it the blood of my new savior. he is just.
he begs me to dance, to marvel men with the
                                                                                    dash
of hips i brought, he deems my mouth in some stranger’s mouth necessary.
bless that man’s mouth, the song we sway sloppy to, the beat, the bridge, the length
of his hand on my thigh & back & i know not which country i am of.
i want to live on his tongue, build a home of gospel & gayety
i want to raise a city behind his teeth for all boys of choirs & closets to refuge in.
i want my new god to look at the mecca i built him & call it damn good
or maybe i’m just tipsy & free for the first time, willing to worship anything i can taste.

—Danez Smith, "The 17-Year-Old & the Gay Bar," Poetry magazine, 2017.

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