There was violence in her legs
it resonated up her spine fed the
synapses in her brain fell from the
edges of her mouth shot from her eyes.
A stifled suppressed violence
blanketed by darkness and lore.
‘With my body I thee worship’.
She had no choice but to endure
this violation –her husband’s
want – he reads her signals all wrong
the anger. Something else she hates -
the way her body reacts wet lubricated
but reluctant-willing? Animalistic even?
He rolls off - farts and wipes himself on
grubby sheets while she quietly weeps into
her pillow, pulls down her nightgown her
knees up, as his semen runs from her and she
wants it out of her;
OUT! OUT! OUT!
This the night of my conception.
Weeks later she attempts to kill me.
Gin and Knitting needles a red hot bath
stabbing, piercing, lancinating through her
cervix, a devastated crying, weeping drunk,
sweating in bloodstained water, those long
cruel devastating, size six knitting needles.
Can’t even afford the two pounds for back
street Annie.
Yet I grew on. Another nine months gone
and she’s so very scared as Aunty Pat wipes
the sweat from her brow as this - a simple
berth in some back room naturally takes it’s
course….
“It’s a bonny lad Edna…and he’s
all right - he’ll be alright Edna, he’s ok – fine,
he’ll be alright….. he will!”
And I’m number five child, one other
dead - stillborn - there’s two more to
go and many more nights of violence
and violation. But never - never again
knitting needles or hot baths. The
occasional Gin though – call it survival
also helps with the guilt call it anaesthetic.
**“Will you love him, comfort him, honor and keep him, in sickness and in health, for richer, for poorer, for better, for worse, in sadness and in joy, to cherish and continually bestow upon him your heart’s deepest devotion, forsaking all others, keep yourself only unto him as long as you both shall live?
1 comment:
Roger, this piece is amazing, and could easily fit among 'best of' I see in litmags. I actually see it as two poems, the first ending with "this, the night of my conception" and the second beginning with "In the first few weeks she tried to kill me." Very powerful work; both personal and accessible at the same time. I think you should travel down this road more often. It may be hard, but nothing worthwhile ever is.
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