Alexa Smith
Summer 2024 | Poetry
Two Poems
Blush
For Grace Stevens Phillips
“You know both colors, Red and
Pink. They are together somehow.
But what do you do with this
overlap? Do you only see the Red
when you look at Pink ? Have you
let memory Red become your lens?
How do you know if you are in
love? Discuss.”
—
Maybe it’s like porn rock sez red
like tipper gore
“I know it when I see it”
That wasn’t
tipper that was
potter sez pink
the justice
Oh
well you knew
what I meant
Maybe sez pink but
then there’s
like the facebook
dress perception
meme exploding
head emojis
everywhere gold
and blue unraveling
the fabric of reality
i felt the contrast
shift like a radio inside
my eye and looked
at science to feel
better like this study
abstract saying color
-normal observers vary
widely in their color
precepts i heard it
on a podcast they sez
I know sez red
I heard the same one
a friend sez rubbing your eyes
is the same thing as rubbing your brain
i know sez
pink i was also
at that party
Oh
We can agree
on who i am
sez pink
w/o ever knowing
like we’re just pointing
at a wall and calling it
the same thing
Mm
have you tried soft
focus? asks red
I tried it and it turned me
on or into you a kind
of weeping across
paper it felt
good
you should
try it
i dunno sez
pink i’m scared of
losing myself i
never liked hard
drugs for that
reason i don’t
want to damage
the membrane yknow
rub too hard
and you just transfer
onto everyone
in the wash
Yeah sez
red I know
I was there too
i mean that’s not
love right
that’s just
chapstick
It was hot
that’s why it left a mark
You’re doing that
thing again
making it
about you
just trying
to relate
it’s how I work
I told you that
before
sometimes i tell
a story and I can’t
remember which one
of us it happened to —
it’s embarrassing
i don’t like showing
up on someone
else’s face
I don’t have that problem
with anyone else
ugh
Good Use
—
“SHE DID ALL THAT SHE COULD”
— Epitaph for Mary Harkness, The Woodlands, 1917
—
step out to see
which one I am
today:
the baby or
the stroller
everyone’s turning
with the light, punks talk
in knots, bike
kneads a walk, arms
slung to merge across
the dead the bench
is named for
blankets rub
the grass, bear
the weight of
pairs sweating
out a memory
bottles drained
crushed and knit
into workwear
flats: a layer to absorb
condensation
in the toe bed
here I am, a callus
sharpened to
and by
a point
at the gate I start a loop
do you like being used
asks the man
I’m riding in my memory
it’s a question, but
could be he phrased it
as command: you like
being used and i buck
against this, stop
short and cry
like a kid who lost
their footing, so
we stop and talk
then live more life
he liked when I scratched
his long, pale belly
now we text every few months
about medieval paintings:
another for the ‘never
seen a woman or a baby’ club
he writes of a mother (maybe virgin)
cradling a child, a small globe
signifying her breast exposed
where if I touched on me I’d find
my collarbone, the ‘baby’ eyeing
his meal warily with the head
of an old man, the torso of
a young one
he tells me his wife says they never
used babies to model Christ
because he was meant to be born
complete, fully
baked, well
done
at the time, I took
his meaning use
as negation of care:
a hiccup of
confusion, then,
when both are present
in our movements,
a friction that makes
moving possible
I pass a grave called GLASS another called MY DARLING another with my name
all still
walking with me
in relation
some relatives are loud
and want to write the poem
for me: I AM MY BELOVEDS
AND / the stones yell MY SOUL WALKS BESIDE YOU EVERY DAY
YOU see me
and interrupt me
as usual
you merge with us
but now it is a memory
moon’s up
WELL DONE, LENORE
says Lenore’s stone
to her body, eaten or
burned years ago, well
done to an idea of Lenore
I carry now back to
the park, a baby
memory doing
well I show you
in my hands
daffodils runners lap me
how are we ever moved
if not by our function
to each other?
WIFE
OF
SON
OF
put
to
put me
to
people call me
tug their light
I decide
not to answer
and keep walking
with you until dinner
Alexa Smith is a writer and teacher from Washington D.C. now living in West Philadelphia. She works in publishing and teaches creative writing at Temple University and UArts. Poems and podcasts can be found on Interim, Entropy, Peach Mag, Spotify and elsewhere.