POEM

Sweet Romanian Tongue

by James Schuyler

Drew down the curse of heaven on her umbrella
furled and smelling of wet cigarettes,
Jo ran off in rain one pitchy night,
one bloody a.m. found her staring, snoring.

“Why do we all stay up so late?” Jo queried.
“Though I don’t stay up so late as my friends.”
She tripped the little bomb of wasps.
They got her.

Tears for Jo, four, each perfect, waspish.
A silver tongue and piss-blond hair
decants a funeral oblation for the mouse.
“She was a rare sight, a winning wonder.
Jo cultivates her toothaches elsewhere.”

This poem originally appeared in the November 2009 issue of Poetry.

November 2009 issue of Poetry Magazine

BUY THIS ISSUE »

 James  Schuyler

Pulitzer Prize winning poet James Schuyler was a central member of the New York . . . MORE »

More Poems by James Schuyler

Buried at Springs

Now and then

The Crystal Lithium

Hymn to Life

Unnumbered Ward

MORE »

Related

Other New York School Poets