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Succubus (Poem V): Difference between revisions

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==Commentary by this poem's author==
==Commentary by this poem's author==
''Tera was contacted by Bradley Steffens about his work and he made the following comments:''
''Tera was contacted by Bradley Steffens about his work and he made the following comments:''<br><br>


I thought I would add that this poem originally appeared in '''''The Bellingham Review, Vol. 11, No.1, Spring 1988, Shelley Rozen, ed.'''''
I thought I would add that this poem originally appeared in '''''The Bellingham Review, Vol. 11, No.1, Spring 1988, Shelley Rozen, ed.'''''
Line 63: Line 63:


''Special thank yous and huggles from Tera to Bradley for taking the time to discuss his work with her...''
''Special thank yous and huggles from Tera to Bradley for taking the time to discuss his work with her...''


==External Links==
==External Links==
*[http://www.ibnalhaytham.net/custom.em?pid=676842 The original source of this page at www.ibnalhaytham.net/].
*[http://www.ibnalhaytham.net/custom.em?pid=676842 The original source of this page at www.ibnalhaytham.net/].
*[http://www.ibnalhaytham.net/index.em?pid=570430 The author's website]
*[http://www.ibnalhaytham.net/index.em?pid=570430 The author's website]

Revision as of 16:29, 2 January 2010


For other uses of the word Succubus, see Succubus (disambiguation).


The following is a poem written by Bradley Steffens.

The original webpage is: here.

The author's website is: here.


Succubus
by Bradley Steffens


arrives unseen at the window ledge,
parts gauzy curtains around slim hips,
waits while her opal eyes, teared with flight,
adjust to darkness.
On the double bed, a man
lies on his back, naked under the sheet
as always. As always his nightgowned wife
sleeps at mattress edge, curled like a fist.
The demon raises her slender arms
high overhead, lifting the hem of the curtain,
letting the pale fabric billow like angels’ wings
in a private parody of the annunciation.
She smiles at her dominion.
In a step she stands at bedside, gently
slips the sheet from her victim’s form,
tracing the curve of his shoulders
with her fingertips.
Lips meet. Then tongues.
Teeth lightly click on teeth until
she lowers and fills herself in one motion.
All night long she takes, takes, enjoying
the human’s secret thoughts and desires
without his knowledge.
Yet in that violation the fiend
asks nothing, requires nothing, leaves the man
to awaken to a blue and empty room
with no memory of the transgression, only
the curious but certain sensation
that the whole of this world somehow exceeds
the sum of its visible parts.


Copyright © 2007 by Bradley Steffens


Commentary by this poem's author

Tera was contacted by Bradley Steffens about his work and he made the following comments:

I thought I would add that this poem originally appeared in The Bellingham Review, Vol. 11, No.1, Spring 1988, Shelley Rozen, ed.

You might be interested in knowing that I consider "Succubus" the best poem I have ever written--and as you can see from my page, I have written and published quite a lot. Also, while I am the author of 28 nonfiction books, I have always considered myself a poet, first and last. So it means a lot to me that this poem I think so highly of is gaining a larger audience thanks to your efforts.


Special thank yous and huggles from Tera to Bradley for taking the time to discuss his work with her...

External Links