In the moonlit garden on the shoulder of the road
I pray that your love reaches a kinder time. You
Bleed out as I unbind the tourniquet keeping him
Harnessed to the meat of your thigh like a pale knife
That had caught you by sleight of wicked hand rather
Than your great Irish love, lucky and sure. It’s infected
And this will hurt greatly. You moan as I pull. And
Pant while you bleed. He dies in the grass. A sorrowful
Grecian fantasy of youth more special without life than
He was while holding onto you. Your wife is married to
A ghost and you are older than her in the hush-hush way
That he was older than you, and you cannot be pressed
For irony when you have spent lifetimes missing him.
Nobody is taking you to court. Not for her. Nobody will
Take you to court if you turn back on yourself in time.
I am the love that dare not speak its name.
I am the love of fearing fathers.
I am the love to which you can return.
I am the love of Gilgamesh.
I am the love that won the war in Troy.
I am the love that you pray abandons you in time.
I am the love.
Lord Alfred Bruce Douglas ‘Bosie’ was sixteen years
younger than Oscar Wilde when his (Bosie’s) father
took Wilde to (his first) trial for sodomy. Presented as
evidence was a poem Bosie had written and published
titled Two Loves, which was a long, ode-like euphemism
for his and Wilde’s love affair. Wilde died of cerebral
meningitis after leaving prison (tragic) and Bosie died
of heart failure (poetic?). I always found the trial romantic.
I probably shouldn’t. This part isn’t meant to be a poem.
I’m only writing it like one to make it less awful. Return
key. Spacebar. I mull over Bosie’s poetry with this too-personal
eagle eyed faith like a bible that promises nothing and I
try to imagine the grey day at Oxford when Wilde and Bosie
met. And as I feverishly dismiss from my mind that Wilde and
Bosie were both awful people and as I once again find myself
creating romantic disillusions for the incorrigibly off-kiltered
power dynamics of the past, I picture this: two hands
meet in the darkness, and for a moment, real love existed like
no other had before.