Banqueting
Today stung my eyes
on its way out
it burnt
my cheeks and
the top of my back
it made a slow farewell
and a whispered beware
always trust a sunset
she knows
that peaches ferment
and go sour
if you leave them with no supervision
for a couple of hours
she knows
that your friend will start crying
and another will leave, call her ex, then return
with a bird she stole
and named Mrs me.
We chase one another on the set table
trying not to fall down, ill or in love
or up in the sky.
From cages of bread
mustard and foam leak in thick clumps
all over the banquet
curbing the scene.
Let’s make plans for another
dance and run out of here
unstick our legs from the chairs
peel our bags off the wall
and land on the street
quiet and steady.
Ready for home.
Originally from Milan, Rosa Crepax lives, writes, and teaches in London. She has a PhD from Goldsmiths University and lectures in critical and cultural studies. Her poetry has received Pushcart and Best of Net nominations, and appears or is forthcoming in Hobart, Spoon River Poetry Review, Ghost City Review, The Good Life Review, LEON Literary Review, 3:AM Magazine, The Harvard Advocate, Grain Magazine, Quarter After Eight, Harpur Palate and others. Her first pamphlet will be published by If a Leaf Falls Press.