JULIA PASTRANA
My boy
My Boy
That I….couldn’t –
Who,
I couldn’t save.
I was an artifact.
Objectified.
My duty
Mine to carry
Mine adorned
With the blood diamonds
and the choking ribbons
and the satins sewn by baby hands
Was my body a vessel?
Even love,
if it was love,
was a cold, Hard bed
stained with dried blood and
dirty cum and
watered-down-
day-old-
S p i r i t s.
Still,
My body
which, was never Mine
It Gave
And that boy….
suffered
could not be protected in life
Could not be protected in death.
We traipsed narrow alleys in Paris,
were dragged through
frolicked amongst the gardens near the Thames
were carted past
leisurely intoxication surrounded by figs and olives and walnuts
poisoned and drugged
My heart sings The Chorus of Hebrew Slaves
Never to live Freedom
So I danced.
IN my hairy nakedness
IN my silken servitude
Until the Body
that I never wanted
Finally broke.
But no death,
No, force protected, even then
from the avarice
and like the animal they always knew me to be
the organs and
the veins and the muscles and the ligaments and the tendons and the fluids
they were removed
And the shell became a doll for the dirty men to play with.
The molecules carry
Remembrances imprinted
in Verdi, in Mozart,
and in fragments of a dying language
polluted corrupted
But that still reverberates through what is left of my body
As a kind of beauty. Terrible.
Terrifying
Beauty.