E.J. Hudak (Poems 7-9)

Open Heart

By now Susanne

You’re reading my letter

If you are laughing

                  I am your fool

If you are sighing

                 I am your servant

If you are crying

                  I am your executioner

How these chains chafe me so,

Susanne!

Held to the cold damp wall

                  By a steel retainer

I pray for a mind transplant

                 — for I love the juice

But hate the container!

Caught In A Sunstorm

(1)

Often on days when I am spent

And I am dry from a dyke burst

Of words

And the sun is hot in heaven

Wrapping me in sensuous warmth

There occurs the moment

Of that kind of woman.

For being sick to death

Of brand-name ethics, I rebel

And turn away to give play

To my mind

Where that kind of woman and I

Can romp unseen

By decaying eyes of half-humans

(2)

She will say

She knows nothing of Sartre

As she lies there naked

Like perfect work from Rodin’s hands.

He would approve, I say,

Because we are here together,

Now,

She tells me

She was with a circus once

As she demonstrates the split.

Good exercise and constant practice

Were her secrets to success.

I asked if she performed upon the high wire

And she relates tales of how

She would sit upon her partner’s shoulders

As they walked in space above a million eyes

But most of all she liked the trapeze,

Swinging by her knees

Upside down so all was blurry:

“It was good for the thighs,” she says

“See?”

A calliope plays at a distance

As hours pass; we never tire

For the mind has inexhaustible energy

We drink pink wine to make us laugh,

And she swings from her knees

Recalling the blur of love

(3)

As she slept, I took my leave

Because the sun was setting

And I felt its warning chill,

The movement of the planet

Controlled our time together,

And it was good

Knowing that a higher order prevailed

Upon the movement of our bodies,

The power of the mind,

The shifting of the planets

The moment of that kind of woman,

The equation of life and truth

That we eternal nomads seek.

(4)

Why must this moment lie obscure,

Hidden in rejection

Until there must be love?

Can a burning star contain the warmth of love?

For love is painful when it burns

Leaving ugly scars.

Yet she came with the sun

Leaving only comfortable fatigue

Whose sunlike burn remains,

A gentle tan:

The imprint of her body and her soul.

She will come tomorrow — if I choose,

And the next day and the next

Until I tire

Of that kind of woman

Whose perfection and endlessness

Are guaranteed by the sun

That lights my internal world.

Blindman’s Bluff

 

I know a man

of sixty or so

who believes I must live

as long as he

before I can know

the meaning of life

To hold longevity

as the mark of wisdom

grants him

an honor

that God wouldn’t give him

For is it fair to say

of a sightless man

of sixty or so

that he’s the word

on the plot

when he’s never seen the show?

I think not.

E.J. Hudak  ca. 1969

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