Friday, October 4, 2019

Self-Portrait Poem

Self-Portrait with Weeping Woman

 
Deborah Paredez
I know why I fell hard for Hecuba—
shins skinned and lips split to blooming lupine
on her throat's rough coat, hurled down the whole length
of disaster—I'm sure I'd grown to know
by then to slacken as a sail against
the current and squall of a womans woe.
What could I do but chorus my ruddered
howl to hers? When youre a brown girl raised up
near the river, there's always a woman
bereft and bank-wrecked, bloodied and bleating
her insistent lament. Ay Llorona—
every crossing is a tomb and a tune,
a wolf-wail and the moon that turns me to
scratch at the tracks of every mud-dirged girl.

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