Featured Poem: “Soap Licker,” by Durian Gourd
I did it
I tasted your vanity’s
forbidden fruit.
I opened the vapid emoji hatch,
produced the most violent tongue from my toolbox.
And now I’m contrite.
I use it to lick a new conscience
a bar of Dove soap
floating in space on the kitchen sink.
Even kings fall to their knees.
A way to preserve our dignity
the regal mouths
that sentence others to death by description.
I hang prostrate, showering in the clean
moral, physical, there’s heat in the water
with the bitter taste of my
fallible tongue.
Soon my mouth will age in reverse to
its former grace: chromely pearls.
The negative years brush my teeth,
my mouth first becomes virgin
until it shifts to oh so simple,
non-verbal, and finally:
turns to the teet,
punishment for everything
I said.