Not Love (A Sestina)
Yes, I would rather sleep alone than fight
and this is why I sleep alone. A drunk?
Not too late, my first last career. I write,
suits the job. Alone, I am a word sea
dotted with empty bottles. As for sex,
I vaguely recall. I liked it with you. Love—
damn that beast! No prerequisite for love.
It needs nothing, not even us. Why fight
when I could sleep on it, on you, have sex
in a dream with a belligerent drunk,
then wake to your gentle coffee? Your sea
is still my sea, though “you’re right,” I won’t write.
I am saying, dear, who gives a text? Write
what you want, or don’t write at all. I love
our love for its constance despite us, sea
change after spare change. I don’t have the fight
that you need to keep you in check, no drunk
fists, battle scars. I choose sleep over sex.
No, our tongues will never touch again. Sex,
I would trade for one sentence from you. Write
of love that’s sailed with no plan for port. Drunk
on wine or waiting, I remain your love,
still mute, still dumb. No hope, no cash, no fight.
I remain your love across idiot seas.
Poets write this way and so do drunks. Sea!
Grief! Lost shoes! The Titian mound of her sex!
Laugh with me. I have given up the fight.
This sweaty, besotted poet who writes
limericks ’round wounds? She bleats of you, love.
Yes, you have rankled this poet, this drunk,
so she will no more speak of what was. Drunk
on my bitter horsetail brew. Allons-y,
and see what I mean? What lasts: only love.
No sail or oars, she’ll stay afloat. But sex
we have some say in, still. Don’t you dare write
of her, on my side of the bed. I’ll fight
only then, bar fight in my brain. I’m drunk
on waiting for you to write. Heart at sea,
no due course. Sex, we have some say. Not love.