Poetry Jacob Bennett — June 26, 2017 12:06 — 0 Comments
Two Poems – Jacob Bennett
7th Grade
If you start dressing like this for
anything other than Halloween, we’reÂ
gonna have to talk, she said, as she used
a foreign brush on my aqua-blue
eyelids. I stood up and faced my step-sister’s
mirror – the one that had seen me so many
times before in her thongs and robes while
she was at cheerleading practice. I adjusted
the hair tie on my left pig tail and smoothed
out the socks stuffed in the polka-dot
blouse I had so carefully chosen at
Wal-Mart. Hoping to bring home bigger candy bars, my
brother and I went to our rich friend’s neighborhood,
which I eventually walked barefoot, my heels in my
pillowcase. However, even they did not make me
feel as unstable as the unassuming mother who
asked me if I was supposed to be Kelly Clarkson
or something. When I came home, I slipped off my
fishnets and put them in a grocery bag beneath my bed –
the one that I would rise from at 6:30 the next morning to
get on the school bus with the boys to whom I was
faggot, was buy some looser jeans, was get a haircut.
Happy Hour
He picked up the tab when the bartender
said he had put it all on one check.
I offered to throw some cash, but
he insisted. This was after he
told me the “three things I needed
to learn in life,†one of which was to
drive a stick shift. He was about ten
years older than me and I think he was
pulling the macho-man shtick ‘cause
his girlfriend and I had been hitting it off.
I got the vibe that they spent most of
their nights watching the news together.
He said I might need to drive someone
to the hospital someday in another car.
After he paid, he left and she and I
kept talking.
What am I?
Bioluminescent eye
That sees by the shine
Of its own light. Lies
Blind me. I am the seventh human sense
And my stepchild,
Consequence;
Scientists can't find me.
Januswise I make us men;
Glamour
Was my image then—
Remind me:
The awful fall up off all fours
From the forest
To the hours…
Tick, Tock: Divine me.
-- Richard Kenney