POEM

The Promise

by Sharon Olds

Sharon Olds
With the second drink, at the restaurant,   
holding hands on the bare table,
we are at it again, renewing our promise   
to kill each other. You are drinking gin,   
night-blue juniper berry
dissolving in your body, I am drinking Fumé,   
chewing its fragrant dirt and smoke, we are   
taking on earth, we are part soil already,   
and wherever we are, we are also in our   
bed, fitted, naked, closely
along each other, half passed out,
after love, drifting back
and forth across the border of consciousness,   
our bodies buoyant, clasped. Your hand   
tightens on the table. You’re a little afraid   
I’ll chicken out. What you do not want   
is to lie in a hospital bed for a year   
after a stroke, without being able
to think or die, you do not want
to be tied to a chair like your prim grandmother,   
cursing. The room is dim around us,   
ivory globes, pink curtains
bound at the waist—and outside,
a weightless, luminous, lifted-up
summer twilight. I tell you you do not   
know me if you think I will not
kill you. Think how we have floated together   
eye to eye, nipple to nipple,
sex to sex, the halves of a creature   
drifting up to the lip of matter
and over it—you know me from the bright, blood-
flecked delivery room, if a lion
had you in its jaws I would attack it, if the ropes   
binding your soul are your own wrists, I will cut them.

 Sharon  Olds

Sharon Olds is one of contemporary poetry’s leading voices. Winner of several prestigious . . . MORE »

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