teach your daughters
to sing the song backwards
counterclockwise
wind in their mouths
teach them early
to breathe in the dust
swirl it into their lungs
teach your children
that the opposite of a secret
is a drink
teach them
by example
to drink air
*
send your daughters
where the earth is soft
they’ll come back
and tell you life is hard
send your daughters
off the planet now
show them how
to do their dirt
in space
send your daughters
to the sky
for clay
practiced as they are
at leaving earth
teach your daughters
that the only world they’ll have
will be the one they shape
by hand
and foot
*
train your daughters
how to dance in mud
cleanse them
of the myth
of solid ground
show them that
the mark they make
is evidence of body
not of word
is evidence of soil
and not of breath
teach your daughters
how to outrun death
Copyright © 2024 by Alexis Pauline Gumbs. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on February 22, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.
They are like those crazy women
who tore Orpheus
when he refused to sing,
these men grinding
in the strobe & black lights
of Pegasus. All shadow & sound.
"I'm just here for the music,"
I tell the man who asks me
to the floor. But I have held
a boy on my back before.
Curtis & I used to leap
barefoot into the creek; dance
among maggots & piss,
beer bottles & tadpoles
slippery as sperm;
we used to pull off our shirts,
& slap music into our skin.
He wouldn't know me now
at the edge of these lovers' gyre,
glitter & steam, fire,
bodies blurred sexless
by the music's spinning light.
A young man slips his thumb
into the mouth of an old one,
& I am not that far away.
The whole scene raw & delicate
as Curtis's foot gashed
on a sunken bottle shard.
They press hip to hip,
each breathless as a boy
carrying a friend on his back.
The foot swelling green
as the sewage in that creek.
We never went back.
But I remember his weight
better than I remember
my first kiss.
These men know something
I used to know.
How could I not find them
beautiful, the way they dive & spill
into each other,
the way the dance floor
takes them,
wet & holy in its mouth.
From Muscular Music by Terrance Hayes, published by Tia Chucha Press. Copyright © 1999 by Terrance Hayes. Reprinted by permission of Terrance Hayes. All rights reserved.