gabrielle grace hogan


Anything to Help You Sleep

Bare with me—take it all off, 
the cardigan that bulges past 
your small, calculated wrists, 
the wires around your eyes.
I am Pavloved—
when you remove your glasses, 
my heart gone aglow in 
microwave light, my body
lit up like a racetrack.
Frame this moment for the nightstand.
Save the space between our teeth
& tongue, open as a mother’s arms. 
Make a memory of the cuspid’s 
geography from the bend of the neck 
to the flicker of the earlobe.
I create a dogma from only a paperclip
& your name said beneath the breath of morning. 
The small slither of the syllable,
thunked down on the sheets 
like a butcher’s fresh cut.
Blankets splayed open 
like a condom on a beach.
Dangling summers
rung through with heat-bells. 
Every hour a blue dancehall 
heaving like a chest.
The sudden bloom of your shirt 
off the stalk of your torso,
the candle of your waist
& the wick of your curls. 
The heat’s peeling citrus,
the summer bending away from this 
moment where I first make
a cup of you.



gabrielle grace hogan

Gabrielle Grace Hogan is a poet from St. Louis, Missouri. She is currently pursuing her MFA from the New Writers Project through the University of Texas at Austin. Her work has been published in Kissing Dynamite, DIAGRAM, Nashville Review, Peach Mag, and others. More of her work and her social media can be found on her website gabriellegracehogan.com.