“For my pleasure I had as soon write free verse as play tennis with the net down.”
—Robert Frost
*
I. The Boxer Rebellion
Your turn of that page
has opened a drawer.
My home. I am his underwear.
He’ll always show you
the contents of his drawers
but never what he’s wearing.
He’s that kind of fellow.
But I’ll give you a clue:
I am his only pair of boxers.
To put it briefly,
he suffers a shortage.
Why only one of me?
Why only one day
of freedom per week
when he could have seven?
That is the question
I once heard
his girlfriend ask.
He replied like Robert Frost
that a little freedom
is almost too much
and went home and
put on briefs.
Short changed.
*
II. A Brief History of the Work Week
Briefs #1 (Sunday)
Freedom’s just another word for lost
In funhouse laundromats where dreams are tossed.
Briefs #2 (Monday)
You’ve got to work to make a living wage,
You’ve got to button up your daily rage.
Briefs #3 (Tuesday)
You’ve got to count your syllables and keep
Your cock and scrotum snug and fast asleep.
Briefs #4 (Wednesday)
You’ve got to keep your humpday hopes pressed down,
It makes no difference if you smile or frown.
Briefs #5 (Thursday)
You might love her, she might love you, but then
Your Adam’s apple bulges up again.
Briefs #6 (Friday)
Thank God? Well, maybe in the morning light,
But Eden’s underwear gets torn at night.
Briefs Chorus (all together)
Like Frost said, don’t play tennis without net.
Don’t let your balls fly free from match to set.
*
III. The Girl Who Was Saturday
I like it when my man is frisky
But when he drinks too much he gets so frisky
Like a shooting star on a Saturday night
He shines so bright but then he passes out.
I like it when he takes me out dancing,
I like it when he cuts loose a little bit, you know,
On a Saturday night after a long week of work,
When he takes off that tie, loosens up his collar, and swings like a birch tree.
I like it when my man gets frisky
And I like to drink and have a good time
But if he drinks too much too fast he passes out too soon
And when I’m ready for the fun to continue on, he’s gone.
He’s lying there in his boxer shorts. I love those boxers,
The ones with the palm trees and the Christmas lights,
He looks so peaceful sleeping there, like an angel, like a fallen soldier, like a child,
But I want my man to wake up and take me to the promised land.
I like it when my man is frisky, when he’s had just a little whisky.
But when I see him on a Wednesday or a Thursday,
He never has those boxers on, he’s wound up tight and white,
But I love my man when he gets frisky on a Saturday night.
*
IV. The Naked Poet Speaks
O boxers, I hear the siren call
Of your easy-open fly
And your free and airy ways.
O briefs, you’ve
held me close and kept me
Safe since childhood.
O Adam, O Eve, O Fruit
Of the Loom, what have you wrought?
Who told you you were naked?
Since childhood, I’ve been
Burdened and blessed with the words
For the days of the week.
I’ve been clothed
With the fabric of toil and dread,
Of yesterday and tomorrow.
But now I stand undressed
Before the dresser of my shame,
I stare into the abyss of my drawers.
In this present moment
I ask of you, O Robert Frost: speak
Your will and testament to me.
*
V. The Shorts Not Worn
(with apologies to Robert Frost and his underwear)
Two shorts submerged in a yellow drawer
And sorry I could not model both
And be one wearer, long I wore
The tighter briefs till I was sore
And then I bent and scratched my undergrowth.
Then took the boxers, just as fair
And having no doubt the looser fit
They were the ones I wanted to wear;
So easy to whip it out and piss anywhere,
The opening truly being made for it.
And both that morning equally lay
In my drawer with shirtsers and socksers.
Oh, I kept the briefs for another day!
Yet knowing how freedom has to have its way
I doubted if I should ever change from boxers.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
On Korrektiv.org ages and ages hence.
Two pairs of shorts in a drawer, and I—
I wore the ones more loose to thigh
And that has made all the difference.
*
VI. Whose Woods These Are
We hope you’ve enjoyed our brief exposé.
The frost is coming, so bundle up, okay?
Be it brief or boxer, boxer or brief,
Relax, unwind, get some relief.
*
VII. Epilogue
The page has turned, the drawer
is closed. The leaves are
falling from the trees.
One brisk fall morn, in the middle of the week,
whistling a carefree tune, he put me on,
slipped on some pants, a shirt, socks and loafers.
I said, Man are you puttin’ me on?
He said: Well,
I’m taking the day off.
And we went shopping
over at that dress-for-less place
and bought a bunch more of me.
Two packs of three, to be exact,
and that’s enough to form a tribe,
for seven days of freedom every goddam week.
The woodchucks and squirrels
are squirreling away their nuts
in the backyard as daylight declines.
But his are hanging loose now
as he kneels and asks his girl
if she’ll tie the knot with him next summer.
So it seems that just when he found
his freedom, he gives it up.
I’m not surprised. He’s that kind of fellow.
*
*
*
THE END
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