Friday, October 28, 2022

The Cunnilingus Poem

 1887 L. C. SMITHERS tr. Forberg's Man.Class. Erotology v. 122 A man who is in the habit of putting out his tongue for the obscene act of cunnilinging.  1897 H. Ellis Stud. Psychol. Sex. I. iv. 98 The extreme gratification is cunnilingus,..sometimes called sapphism.


--Oxford Dictionary of the English Language, online


The gratification can be extreme. That’s true.
As I look at this poem, I’m feeling good
about it, but we both know that
the poem’s language—yes, that’s right,
its tongue—oughtn’t to degrade, devalue,
pornographize, evade, or abuse its subject.
That’s been done. The poem has opened,

chooses telling Showing happens, too.
The poem does not advise discretion.
It decides to locate itself respectfully where
it believes it’s been invited. It chooses to be human
and hopes you’ll understand. Now it proceeds
beyond the play of preliminaries.

Her apartment was in a cheap, two-story
stucco heap—palatial compared to my place.
We lay on her bed in a close, hot room: Spring.
California’s Central Valley, deep between
Coast Range and Sierra Nevada, had already ovened up.
She kept her window open. She lay back.
The pillow-cases were bright red. She relaxed.
She opened her legs. I went down on her eagerly
I might say earnestly. Great erotic generosity inspired me,
or so I chose to believe about myself.

Wait. There’s no rush. We have time to instruct anatomy,
biology, and pornography to go away, to leave us alone.
Believe it or not, this poem

          likes its privacy.

Hot, stuffy, small, and cheap, the room
transformed itself. She and I—well,

we took our time. There was no rush. Our time.
Her room. The heat. I took her own sweet time
and gave some of it back to her.

It was sex. Obviously. We
devoured a ripe, wet, hot interval of
life. That’s all and not a little bit.  When
she orgasmed (what a mash of syllables),
she seemed to have nothing to do with the

pseudo-scientific infinitive, to orgasm. She screamed.
That happens to be right. Screamed. Yelled
and shouted, too. It was louder for being privately public.
“Ecstasy”?  I don’t know: That word makes me nervous.
It belongs to romance novels and a drug.
There’s no rush to use it. Anyway, her sounds
were so loud they startled me, and I lost my place.
I smiled while I was turning to cunniling 
into a conjugated, tense present. There was no rush
.
I found my place again, went back to work. 
Play. It was sex, not poetry.
So far so good? I raised my head

from loving work. It is,
can be, good work,—
cunnilingus. It shouldn’t be labor
but can be more than play. . . . I
raised my head to listen to her and to
watch the rest of her body and her face

and take in the holy scene of the room. Is
holy too much? Absolutely, so let’s leave
it, posted on the stucco heap
like a notice from a landlord. I offered
her a pillow with which to muffle the aria,
if she so chose. She chose not so.

Well played! I heard people giggling outside
in California, on the black asphalt of
an apartment-complex’s baked parking lot,
no rush of breeze out there. I smiled, and I
went down again into what had become

for her a rich source of satisfaction, a fabled
California mine, a vein of golden pleasure, a rush.
I’d become a famously employed miner,
producing lavish treasure with simple tools,
tongue and mouth and lips. I exhibited care
and the will to give my head. Such a primitive,
post-modern afternoon it was, whatever
that means. It wasn’t history,
but it was the best we two could do.


She was the only person she’d ever be.
She wanted to be satisfied on a

rickety bed in a blazing, stucco apartment.
I knew her, and I showed up. I
gave her what she invited me to give.
It was basic and civilized, polite,

profane, sacred, and plain. It tasted
and smelled the way it ought to. She became
immortally satisfied for an interval
of afternoon. I swear I still heard
people laughing at sex-sounds coming,
so to shout, from her open window.
worked at loving, making a delivery,
freighting freedom and joy to the realm
of her body. That’s an overstatement.

I know the names of body-parts,
and so do you. This isn’t about that,
but please see references to tongue, lips,
mouth, legs, and head above. The window,
her legs, my mouth, our lives were open.


You can’t rush these things, but it
ended. I was a sweating, naked man

with a sense of charity, accomplishment,
and gratitude. And it was fun.
She was a contented naked woman,
so I didn’t say anything, and I didn’t
want anything.

 

There’s never been a rush to remember,
and it’s customary to keep such things
private unless your profession is
pornography or politics.  Oh, well,
this is a poem, and poems get interested
in this kind of thing. You know how it is.
Writing this, I feel good about it.
I smile and pay homage to her ecstasy,
which was different from that word.
She filled herself up. She
shouted, my mouth pressed to her
self-possessed body, which thrilled.
I thrilled at fearsome pleasure. There’s
 
no rush, but one must act. Communion
occurs so variously, mysteriously,
sometimes with stucco and asphalt
nearby, and the rent due. I remember
rubbing my face on her thighs and then
on red cotton sheets to get some wet and sweat
off, not all. I licked my lips. I remember
peace, the peace of wordless afterwards. No rush,

no rush at all. If this poem offends or bores you,
you know why, and I hope you didn’t read
this far, but if you did, it’s over now. Be well.

hans ostrom 2006/2022

 


Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Convicted Art

Sometimes I think museums
imprison art, jamming convicted
paintings into overcrowded galleries.

Each framed work seems
to want to live alone, lounging
in the care of just one person--

pardoned. Dull-eyed, we visitors
stagger and stand with guide-books,
stare at hanged landscapes

and superb but silly portraits.
We stumble from one walled off
period to another, under the sleepy

eyes of guards. For the crime
of having been made famous,
turned-in to authorities by collectors,

the art clings to walls, stays
still like spiders. Exhausted,
we get released into whatever

city we're visiting. Maybe we breathe
deeply and think of the fresh art
taking shape right there, right then.


hans ostrom 2022

October

It was my father's favorite month,
tourists having evaporated. Time to
hunt a bit, when dark oak trees
detonated clouds of orange
in the evergreen Sierra mass.

October at the college,
ritual ivy going gold
to keep illusions alive &
the syllabus I sweated over
in August seeming to cruise--
as long as I, like a mechanic,
tinkered, replaced parts,
oiled students' rusting interest
with adjustments, listened
for the tell-tale whine.

October: darkness demands
more time. No bargaining allowed.
I fall in love again with sunlight,
hoping she will have me back
again, late in Spring.

hans ostrom 2022

A Shepherd In War Time

 A shepherd sees drones cruise
over the pasture and blast his village
to bits. Bloody bits, he knows. He
falls to his knees, collapses.

The panicked sheep have scattered.
The dog cowers--but now approaches
the shepherd. Who holds tight
to the dog. They are both shaking.

The shepherd begins to walk
toward his village. The closer
he gets, the more wailing he hears.
His mind fades in and out.

His legs will barely carry him.
He trusts the dog will gather the sheep
and protect them.

hans ostrom 2022

Sunday, October 23, 2022

I filled my guitar with water and it sounds UNREAL

Head-Shrinks and I

I went to a Freudian. She didn't
say anything, just took reams of notes.
I wanted to read them: No. Once
I said the word "emblematic,"
and she rolled her eyes. I quit
after the second session. Freudian
time-waster. 

A psychologist had me 
write charts of when I catastrophize,
over-react. They made for a good
map of how nutty I was,
but didn't crack the nut. 
I liked her a lot. 

Then a psychiatrist, polymath,
know-it-all. I listened a lot,
which suited my diffidence. 
I want to be told how to fix
things, not blab and gab
and gas-bag. He prescribed
meds that work. Finally! 
I just don't have the time
or energy to stay crazy,
you know? Too much of
a commitment. 

I noticed that if a session
ran out of gas (because I
didn't talk), a couple of shrinks
would say, "Want to talk about
dreams?" Inside joke among
shrinks, I think. Doubly funny,

as after I sleep through 
a great night of dreaming,
wild surrealistic rides,
I feel as sane as hell. 

hans ostrom 2022

Emily Dickinson on ghosts: "One Need Not Be a Chamber to Be Haunted"

"Ghosts," by Elizabeth Jennings

"Haunted Houses," by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow