Poem beginning with an erasure of Baudelaire’s “A Hemisphere in Your Hair, Karen Neuberg

Let me plunge 

let me wave               stir memories in the air.


My soul                                                          holds a whole
ocean 
 teeming with songs,            elegant and intricate

 

long hours                  cradled           flowers and cooling water 
I breathe in the fragrance
    the night                     memories

 

 

                         and there I am, seeing myself again 

 

nervous as I glance in the vestibule mirror

and open the door to our house.                            He 

 

stands at the bottom step behind my best friend

and her boyfriend. As I look down, he looks up. Our eyes

 

touch.                                     Even now, half a century later, he spills 

into my head                         when I really want to be telling you

 

about the outfit I was wearing—its blue-gray color 

complimented my eyes and the corduroy pencil pants 

 

made my legs look long and my hips slender. The boat-neck top

draped on me as though I had larger breasts.                 And the shoes—

 

four-toned oxford flats that I felt declared

I was more than just another cookie-cut teen girl.

 

In them, I’d skirr with new-found confidence from class to class

where I’d write that boy’s name on my book covers and notebook pages

 

for far too long after it was over.

©

Karen Neuberg’s poems have recently appeared or are forthcoming in Glassworks, Gone Lawn, Misfit, Unbroken, and Verse Daily.. She is the author of PURSUIT (Kelsay Books, 2019) and the chapbook the elephants are asking (Glass Lyre Press, 2018). She’s associate editor of the online journal First Literary Review East and lives and writes in Brooklyn, NY. Links to more of her work can be found at karenneuberg.blogspot.com.

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