Two Poems - Taylor Devlin
Gorgons
I have lived amongst creatures, delicate
yet hard as teeth. Honey and milk seeping
from mouths, sticking to our skin. Medusa,
fair maiden of Greece, we are all your three
sisters. How with a single glance each man
crumbled. Give us the stare Gods slit your neck
for, blood sweet with venom. Marble and stone,
grasping gold amidst glistening water,
snakes hissing at our necks. We make our nails
daggers, slash those envious of our being,
carve a trench into fleshy thigh, or for
an itch rip nylon stockings up to shreds
the men now in these trenches, Perseus,
Polydectes, begging us stop biting.
How Would You Know?
How would you know that my own
head is a burning building
Unless you were inside the dream
where I'm on a boat with a man
I don't know and he is dying,
the sea nothing but salt and ice.
When I became a woman,
my emotions were met with impatience—
A real waste of time, these insides,
a continual up-down, up-down,
How could you understand, when you ask
if I am crying for a reason and I say no
But what I mean is there are a million
reasons.
How would you see my own
head stuffed with pillows of smoke
unless you knew I said no
to give myself enough space to crawl out
unless you saw the growing tree
in my backyard felled by lightning
the soft peaches becoming bruised
and then small ghosts