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Apr 17

2 poems by Nancy Patrice Davenport

Ex-Lovers and Kittens #1

it’s another Sunday in January
the devil is beating his wife
rain falls on sunny bricks

I am still drunk from last night
the hangover is for now, postponed
as I wander
          half-awake

questioning introspection

the earth is for now washed clean
in dull grey-green Diebenkorn shades

the eaves are filled with finches
camellias tipped with pearls of translucence
we shine together in the sun that rises

midlife is not a crisis
it’s a turning point

I start drinking early
dozing naked in the hot tub
surrounded by birdsong, my cigarettes
my cats, my memories

my regrets, your ghost

each sensation transmits a physical
stimulus to perception

my lack of articulation        sings   its      own   sweet    song

silence says more

life is a draft in process

I am not the ice queen that you think I am

with my phone in the kitchen
my mind is allowed to wander

into coruscating chronicles and
oneric flashbacks

finding the ordinary extraordinary

the air between me and the sky        is set afire

everything is nothing
nothing is everything

expectations are disappointments
in advance

the cats yawn, the cats stretch

I drink my whiskey

so, what does all this mean?

today will never happen again

 

Thinning Out Trees

you were nicer when you were poor

but this doesn’t matter

my brain turns off
my body turns on

what does liking matter?

you like to call me Queenie
we scorch the entire
morning

in my old bedroom at mom’s

we fuck our way through
the morning news

the tree trimmers come
and go
allowing in a lot more light

we bicker over morning coffee

you ask me for an apology

I just take off my clothes

you love my scarlet letter
but you don’t get it

you are not the first man to call me whore

I escape your upper arm

be careful, be careful

I’m always left invisibly blistered


Nancy Patrice Davenport is a native of the San Francisco Bay Area. She lives in San Mateo with three cats.

Nancy’s poems are widely published in various journals and anthologies, and have been translated into many different languages. Nancy’s “JUNE 2 RETROGRADE MINDFULNESS” poem was nominated for the 2016 Best of Net.

Nancy’s first chapbook, LA BRIZNA, was published in 2014 by Bookgirl Press. A full-length book of poems, SMOKING IN MOM’S GARAGE, was published in 2018 by Red Alice Press. Nancy’s latest book, Nothing and Too Much to Talk About, is available from Roadside Press.