Friday, December 17, 2010

Sleeping with Boa

by May Swenson


I show her how to put her arms around me,   
but she’s much too small.
What’s worse, she doesn’t understand.   
And
although she lies beside me, sticking   
out her tongue, it’s herself she licks.

She likes my stroking hand.   
And
even lets me kiss.
But at my demand:
“Now, do it to me, like this,”   
she backs off with a hiss.

What’s in her little mind?
Jumping off the bed,
she shows me her behind,
but curls up on the rug instead.
I beg her to return. At first, she did,   
then went and hid

under the covers. She’s playing with my feet!   
“Oh, Boa, come back. Be sweet,
Lie against me here where I’m nice and warm.   
Settle down. Don’t claw, don’t bite.
Stay with me tonight.”
Seeming to consent, she gives a little whine.

Her deep, deep pupils meet mine   
with a look that holds a flood ...   
But not my brand.
Not at all.
And,
what‘s worse, she’s much too small.
 
from: Yale Review 81, no. 2 (January 1993). Copyright 1993.



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