For Emily Dickinson
The suit is Italian, tailored
by the fine hands of a man
who’s known the bodies
of so many men
Seen shoulders stoop
chests shrink, bellies swelling
all without judgment
in his tape measure confessional
Besides, it means more work
Charcoal, double-breasted
paid for with support
from the National Endowment for the Arts
the jacket is now neatly folded
on the edge of the bed
I have no trouble with the knot
of the tie, the belt unbuckling
buttons up and down to the fly
I’ve done it all before for more
age-appropriate encounters
We’re in White Plains, NY
The day so still you can hear
the money growing on the trees
outside. Enough to just
reach out and pluck a bill
One for each poem
Fold them into the pockets
of the pants now pooled
around his hairless ankles
The skin surprises me:
not long for this world
pale parchment
wordless punctuation
good for one last binding
As the silk underwear
slides to the floor
at last
I'm reminded of a haiku
he wrote once
in apparent self-pity
Something about
a sushi counter
no one for company but
a limp, lifeless eel
holy shit
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