"Reading Boss Cupid"

to Thom

Nick Dix

Nick Dix (he) is a poet and programmer residing in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. His work has been published in The Adirondack Review and Hearth & Coffin. He has been reading and writing poetry ever since seeing the arresting cover of Yusef Komunyakaa’s Neon Vernacular.
Boss Cupid (2001) was Thom Gunn’s last collection, a meditation on those he’d lost to the AIDS epidemic and an indignant rage against the dying of the light. ‘Reading Boss Cupid‘ addresses Gunn in his own formalist style, highlighting the unspoken but palpable sense of humiliation in dying: life kicks you when you’re on the way out. Gunn’s passing haunts the collection. In ‘Reading,’ François Villon, the medieval French rogue-poet, serves as counter-cultural kindred to Gunn. Both took flight: one from prison and a hanging, the other towards the drugs that would lead to his death.”
opaque tape top

     Is this what I have to look forward to?
     Sick friends dissolving in their wretchedness
     In beds, in lusts, sad vanity, a slew
     Of bodies slew, unslaked, without redress,

     In various states of undress? You pined
     Not former times but how the muscle flexed
     Beneath the sleeve, hidden, well-defined,
     Sweet but prurient eye entranced and vexed

     By what you’d lost. Perhaps you would object,
     You still had strength to pull the ones you’d press,
     Bone thin, to your chest. I might interject
     “An itch to steal or otherwise possess”

     Might be a fix you still had yet to fix.
     You’re fixed. I’m not. Or maybe not just yet.
     There’s still time for guitar, to learn the licks,
     To finger frets. I’ve earned my licks, regret

     Nothing. I still can bench with no debenture,
     No aching joints tomorrow. I’ll bear the lactic
     Fires and iron weights. But the next adventure
     Here after youth, when ambition’s galactic

     Ambit constricts, a singularity
     From which light can’t escape? What’s left to do?
     Who’s left? With an old man’s precarity
     And empty hunger I could hobble through

     My job until I have a stroke and move
     In paralyzed circles that ever tighten
     To a lightless point. We don’t have to prove
     Ourselves, do we? I thought you were a titan,

     But I guess even Hyperion shined
     Until Apollo showed him up and snuffed
     That trembling light. I wonder, did you find
     Your former glory or were you rebuffed

     Standing, you thought, near heaven at those heights?
     Did you wonder where last years’ snows had gone?
     After all you’d suffered, all of life’s slights,
     You still filched some pleasure. Francois Villon,

     The thief, knew how to steal away from grief,
     From pens and daggers, in wordless exile.
     The start of eternity is a brief,

 

opaque tape b