Deflowering

How sad and strange

the name for that rupture,

stripping the bloom

from the vine, the plucking 

off, a beheading, really.  As if once

it is taken, the value of the plant

is less – it withers, dies.

It hurt, I do remember that,

the darkening blossom 

in my underpants, and the boy

I was with – it meant nothing 

to him, my flower as

inconvenience, as obstacle

to his pleasure, since

being the girl, of course

I wouldn’t have any, and if I did

I must be slutty, and so I had to  

take my place in the hierarchy 

of good girl sluts

and bad girl sluts, and 

O my dear, dear girl, I see you

rushing off to lie with him

on the cold vinyl backseat

of his dark blue Chevy

and I wish you an armful

of blood red roses, their thorn-

laden faces fierce 

in their opening,

the petals magically intact.

KATELYNN HIBBARD’s books are Sleeping Upside Down, Sweet Weight, and Simples, winner of the 2018 Howling Bird Press Poetry Prize. Read more.

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Daffodils Blooming Too Early in March

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A Gardener’s Rounds