Susan Wallack (Philadelphia, USA): "Tahiti"
Death's young, lush, smooth skinned, canny,
posed au naturel, cocoa belly
down on an improvised divan, eyes
rolled back to study Gauguin (who
flatters himself she's scared of him). Slapping
liverish paint to a faux
background, fantasy blooms
where the native truth would be: an endless
queue of stunted men,
shuffling forward, shifting dumbly
outside thatched huts infested with fleas.
Inside Death squirms, ever horny, flexing
moist pink lips as if he were a child,
slow to see where to fix his bristling
prick, bury Art, take his pleasure now.
originally published in the G.W. Review, spring 1999
posed au naturel, cocoa belly
down on an improvised divan, eyes
rolled back to study Gauguin (who
flatters himself she's scared of him). Slapping
liverish paint to a faux
background, fantasy blooms
where the native truth would be: an endless
queue of stunted men,
shuffling forward, shifting dumbly
outside thatched huts infested with fleas.
Inside Death squirms, ever horny, flexing
moist pink lips as if he were a child,
slow to see where to fix his bristling
prick, bury Art, take his pleasure now.
originally published in the G.W. Review, spring 1999
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