| InterBoard Poetry Competition | |
| Second Place Winner, February 2010 | |
|
A QUESTION OF NAKEDNESS Melanie Firth (Wild Poetry Forum) fragment by fragment, on a small scale, by successive developments, cellularly, like a laborious mosaic. –Anais Nin Nips, lips and a chasm of whiteness. A mark they call ‘birth.’ Imperfection that wants to love itself. All that stand-alone. The great crowding physicality. How flesh recalls action, but scars over the cost. The questions flesh fold on, give rise to. Do I turn you on? Turn on you? Hurt when I press here. Here? The thigh’s mole, will it answer to melanoma, to Melanie? How SP30+ became a process of affection, cotton sucking on a figurative field of follicles and sweat. The occasional horror of a deep metaphorical wound or otherwise and the smug nature of paper cuts. Beauty versus scars. Natural regeneration vs. stocking-up on anti-aging products. All the recesses I fear and my inability to say ‘hole’ around your arousal. Pinkness and rawness (that relationship). The take-it-in-your-stride concept of disposal, birth and of f—ing. The body’s gumption. How it breaks on time, indulgence and self-harm. The egging-on of the virile seed. Regret for the wounded animal who leaves me bloodless, but fools me into power. The lack of cushioning on shoulder blade, knee and elbow fixtures. The exasperation of a slow scab and the fruitless study of palms. The distrustfulness of wrists. How I cannot really slander or comprehend my nakedness at all. Comments by judges Dorianne Laux and Joseph Millar: “We liked this poem for its generosity to the aging body in all its guises, its scars and scabs and folds, its furrows and deadly moles. We also like the innovative use of language and syntax: ‘The body’s gumption. How it breaks / on time, indulgence and self-harm. / The egging-on of the virile seed.’”
|

