Three Poems By: Emma Wippermann | The Quietus

Three Poems By: Emma Wippermann

New writing on tQ this week takes us once more back to Brooklyn — this time via Berlin and biblical references — for three new poems by Emma Wippermann

BOROUGHS


The fact is she fell asleep on the train, and they took

everything they could carry. First her unlabeled brown bag,

her wallet with one credit card. Then they pinched her hat

from the top and plucked it gently off.

Her leather gloves were pulled from the fingertips,

sneakers fully unlaced. They unwound her scarf,

revealing a skin that would freckle in summer.

Her coat was taken, her pants undone

and shimmied carefully down both legs.

The shirt, conveniently a button-down, was pulled by a hand

at her back. Bra unclasped, underwear snipped, socks,

slightly sweaty, were slid off and rolled back together.


She slept on, the hairs on her bare forearms erect. The train


rose from the thick dark onto the bridge above

the night of the city and she ascended, her cool skin around

her; the place she at last could fill

with the unregulated productions of her desire.


THE FALL


I lived with Eve

on the corner of Cricket & Spring, on the first floor of a house rented out

by Father Tom and the Sisters next door. Our borders

were the church parking lot in the back,

rap blasting at the red light out our bedroom window,

the lilac bushes lisping by the drive. Our kitten slept

beneath them, would wake and wander back inside

smelling dreamy; and the leaky bay windows gazed South;

and we could walk to Trader Joe’s.


I remember once

we smoked grass packed in the top of a still-good autumn apple, sweet

smoke swirls stroking the old white wainscoting and then when

Eve ate it!

__


When we met, I didn’t sleep for a week but lay

longing, curled awake in my branches

until she came back with her bags

to share my narrow bed. Spring, summer, fall stealing

figs from the nuns’ tree, chewing hidden behind the fading lilac greens.


And then – our cat ran away

and we ran out of things

to discover for each other.

__


I had a dream that it was summer

in Brooklyn, post-apocalypse. I was

walking the bleak blocks to her

new place. Three souls left: me, Eve,

and the still cat across the street.

I opened the door and looked up through darkness

to a halo of light falling through from the roof

where Eve, chest now bound tight to the rib,

wearing that heather-pink shirt, alone,

Eve was gardening.


JULY


1.


She hated the sand so we stayed

in New York, sweat our way to the fancy

deli, to her cousin’s place in Chelsea.

From the window July sparkled

and croaked. The TV spoke

patriotic, blabbed flags all day

and with twilight we climbed to the roof.

Millions of dollars exploded

from the Hudson, what a waste, what a

big footprint, crooked, kissing, winding

our drunk way out. I held her

back at the red light.

“Don’t patronize,” she said to me

and the speed of the taxis,

to the hour arching over

Hart Crane’s bridge.


2 . Berlin


The sun is six hours early here

or the moon’s up late in Brooklyn,

still skipping scalloped power lines,

spokes spinning in the heat

already I’m pedaling, and a different she

is straddling the rack on the back, hands low around me.

“That’s how you break a bike!” shouts some guy.

and the park is smoky, white bodies bared

in sun celebrations, cherry pits all over the ground.


I want to give her something but

pulling another flower, I break the stem of the first

and I can’t put either back.


Emma Wippermann is another writer in Brooklyn. She sells books at BookThugNation and prints poems at Ugly Duckling Presse

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