THE HEAD-SPIDER

Where I lived once, a roller coaster’s range

of timber hills peaked just by our backyard cliff

and cars undulated scream-driven round its seismograph

and climbed up to us with an indrawn gasp of girls.

Smiles and yelling could be exchanged as they crested

then they’d pitch over, straining back in a shriek

that volleyed as the cars were snatched from sight

in the abyss, and were soon back. Weekdays they rested,

and I rested all days. There was a spider in my head

I’d long stay unaware of. If you’re raped you mostly know

but I’d been cursed, and refused to notice or believe it.

Aloof in a Push squat, I thought I was moral, or dead.

Misrule was strict there, and the Pill of the day only ever

went into one mouth, not mine, and foamed a Santa-beard.

I was resented for chastity, and slept on an overcoat.

Once Carol from upstairs came to me in bra and kindness

and the spider secreted by girls’ derision-rites to spare

women from me had to numb me to a crazed politeness.

Squeals rode the edge of the thrill building. Cartoonist Mercier

drew springs under Sydney. Push lovers were untrue on principle.

It’s all architecture over there now. A new roller coaster

flies its ups and downs in wealth’s face like an affront.

I’ve written a new body that only needs a reader’s touch.

If love is cursed in us, then when God exists, we don’t.