Friday, October 6, 2017

Kristen de Kline #154 Kisses

The first kiss I manage to catch
I nail it down on a corkboard
with pointy little tacks
like an exhibit
in a science show

The second I pour into an ice cube tray
stash it in the freezer
on top of the Vodka bottle

I place the third kiss
behind a thick glass frame,
hang it next to the Frida Kahlo's

I turn the fourth kiss
into a passport-size photo
slide it into the see-through spot
in the wallet
on top of
the husband wife children pets
lurking    there

I don't know
what happened
to your other kisses

I stopped counting





7 comments:

  1. YOUR KISSES
    (1979-80)

    When you moved
    a cat blew down Watkin Street
    crumpled up like a newspaper.

    At first you sent me short notes
    simple illustrations of affection.
    I kept those
    then your kisses began
    arriving in the mail.
    I remember the first one.
    In the lounge room
    I was standing in a square
    of sunlit carpet
    when it came.

    Your lips leapt out to kiss me
    just like that.
    You weren't there
    just the unabashed lips.
    It wasn't embarrassing,
    it was your kiss.

    After that
    I stopped using the paper knife.
    It seemed too dangerous
    and I never knew what would
    come in the mail anymore.

    You played tricks with me.
    A long serious cuddle came
    in a weighty parcel
    that looked like
    a rejected manuscript.
    That was a surprise.

    Once I was lying in a hammock
    in the backyard
    wanting to be in a warmer place
    with a better view
    when a quick passionate kiss
    came disguised as the phone bill.
    I'd thought it was a reminder notice.
    It just disappeared into the air
    or up my nostril.

    Eventually the postie caught on.
    Just seeing him embarrassed me.
    To avoid him
    I'd have a bath
    about that time of day
    but then he started
    delivering them to me
    in the bathtub.

    He liked to see the look on my face.
    It was a bit of a giggle for him.
    He'd been your postman too
    when you'd lived here.
    I recall
    once he'd been curious
    and just taken a peak.
    Your teeth must have snapped
    the warning marks onto his nose.

    Naturally everyone was jealous of me.
    The mailbox in the front yard
    overflowed with affection.
    Gradually your tokens
    came to outnumber all the other
    items of mail.

    I had to take drugs
    to stay up late at night
    to finish my correspondence.

    It was alright
    being a local spectacle for a while
    but when the reporters
    started waiting for me
    queueing at the garden gate
    and even following the postie around
    you went into hiding.
    You couldn't stand the attention
    and I couldn't blame you.

    Eyes lowered in the morning
    and lonely in my office cage
    I'd invent disabilities for myself.
    Then our banning orders came.
    We flinched,
    stuck in our suburbs
    but we kept to them.

    We made a secret rendezvous
    – a pick-up point.
    Your messenger would speed past the park
    in a cute little Fiat,
    a red Fiat convertible.
    She'd toss the parcel over her shoulder
    like a paper boy.
    Anxiously I'd try to catch it
    between my teeth.
    Sometimes the parcel
    bounced off my head
    boing boing

    Sated I’d sit in my office
    or someone else's,
    wimp around
    wait for your telex.
    Bushfires would follow me all the way home
    fogging my windscreen.

    In a dawn raid
    police found our lips together.
    The constable had a smirk
    turned away,
    the sergeant kept a serious look,
    paused waiting for our lips to part
    before making an arrest
    politely.

    There was a garden
    and a garden keeper's house,
    a hill that lovers tumble down.
    The harbour was walled right round the bay.
    In exile I kept a rude hut
    thatched of brick and iron
    in the city. From the bars of my cell
    I could haul myself up to the light
    just see the housetops and the spires
    and birds haiku across a valley
    on the first day of spring.

    Finally your messenger came again,
    your errand in her arm outstretched.
    the note confused me
    – an expanse of page
    trees and embankments :
    pictures of a gold rush.

    I could pull rabbits out of my hat
    but today I should not think of the past.
    I should fix all the things in my room
    that have stopped working.

    And right now
    listening to the dull rattle of my voice
    and the wind whistling across the tops
    of the milk bottles I'm carrying
    I'm falling into a deep sleep,
    a trance where life becomes one long anecdote
    and when I come out of the shop
    it's raining

    raining kisses
    and the road and the railtracks
    and the buildings I
    are all covered
    with the lipstickless smudge marks
    of your kisses
    and everything is wilting with one sigh.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Kit, that is simply one stunner of a poem - absolutely adore it!

    ReplyDelete
  3. it's in my first book - The Naming of the Harbour and the Trees - Hale and Iremonger (1990) ... I'll get you a copy when our paths cross sometime

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Would love to read the book- definitely when our paths cross!

      Delete
  4. Ripper, yes that counting cessation says so much, but not necessarily bad of course!

    ReplyDelete

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