NuPl-
I hope you posted your work with the idea that dolts like me would think - and post - about it. Having already been addressed by Mr. Breslin this week, I will certainly feel more like a prick if that's not the case.
I found an awful lot to like about your poem, and I find myself compelled to keep reading it. (I believe that's a very good sign.) I find myself drawn particularly to the following lines, which come together over two stanzas:
" Had I merely been rejected, brushed off
Not given the time to study that mouth
I could have easily turned to my right
I was transfixed. Hopelessly off my game"
Our poet finds himself a "playuh" in a pick-up situation, only to get befuddled to the degree that his game, and his evening, fall apart. Great image, and very original concept.
I take from your opening that she utters the first stanza, and says banal through a damn fine looking pair of lips. Our playuh then admits to having opened himself up for her challenge by "having described my life in such a way That permitted, I suppose, an assessment." If I am misreading this interplay, please let me know. If not, could it be that our poet has a little wedding-ring issue that he doesn't want to bring up to the young lady right now? I know he is alone once he gets to bed, but so are a lot of business travelers who find themselves in pick-up bars.
Another thought is that bar-rooms are rife with sensory stimuli, but I find only perfume in your work. I wouldn't mind smelling smoke, peanut shells or buffalo wings, or hearing giggling drunks or blues while I read this one. On the other hand, maybe those who drink Cabernet in bars go to different bars than I do.
Enjoyed your poem a lot. Thank you.