Written in the Margins - Poetry by Marcel Monroy
Illustration by Marcel Monroy
In these poems, I am attempting to explore the dichotomy between growing up in an intensely religious environment and being an openly queer person of color in the south. In coming to terms with otherness, I found an inherent necessity to reconcile the metamorphosis of my psyche with the doctrines that shaped my values; and close the gap between moralistic shifts in the changing landscape of my sexuality. I thought I had to give up until I realized it was ok to give in, and usually the latter feels better. Through lived experiences I found strength in the chains that bound me, and that’s what I hope to share in this work: freedom from spiritual bondage.
Written in the Margins
Pervert my ends
Show up as the serpent
In the sheep’s mouth
My fleece is for the shepherd
Take it good again
Feed the flock rotten fruit
Make it good again
Bring it to the garden
Bayou (2019)
Be the one
To find my
Body down by
The river bottoms
Bring the lye
Try the holy fire too
Burn it to be sure
This is how you save
Baptisms on Saturdays
Tongue tithe the latter day
Forbidden Fruit
Eye, blind to indiscretion
Sink into depression
Silent repression of emotion
Wash me in your ocean
Tides pull me out to sea
But the mist will
Leave me alone, sitting
Wondering by the phone
Will you call or come home?
Practice for the coffin
When your touch will not soften
The sadness of a stiff face
Once holding grace given by God
By God you will miss me when
The Serpent rears its head and
Hisses headfirst into the fire
Hunger for forbidden fruit
Wait until its ripe to rip it from the root