When I caught him in the bar I didn't know him

till I saw his curious ring that was his mother's:

I'd erased his unlucky face, and thought it was

... somebody else. Glad I did the wrong thing,

still I left him there with my embarrassment.

I keep a spare torch for him in the closet:

the batteries are obsolete now, you can't get them.

 

Every good boy deserves favour, and that

includes me: doing unto others, doing good

by stealth, doing the vacuuming only when alone

because it isn't done to be seen working,

wanting to be a Wise Virgin. Ready when you are:

till then I have man-sized tissues by my lamp

and a flip-top bin to discharge them into.

 

If I were a qualified body electrician

I'd connect up our moments of weakness

and demonstrate how they point, they rub.

The hand, the screwdriver, the spark - we learn

insulation, and our fantasies wear condoms.

There's a candle for you under the bed,

come over and hide there some time.

 

Rubbing together like boy scouts can start up

blazes of inflammatory behaviour, every

lifesaving effort a worse liability.

I doubt if we'd manage the heart-shaped badge,

and I don't stay up reading the instruction manual.

For you I've put an oil can in the garage

and labelled it 'Danger'. You got a match?

 

No need to skin our desire, or clothe it with

tit bells to warn each other how to hurt.

Promise I won't write, if you won't read, and

I'll fix our weaknesses to glow without touching

till dawn comes up through a rubber window.

I want a torch to hand on ahead of me.

Go on: we shine from the sheer need of light.