You take the lettuce and I’ll take the tomato (and other things I’ll never say in the throes of passion)

Gripping the pen/the ball/the rock
is all the same- with intent to strike.

She wondered if anyone said “ho!” without
malice anymore and if so,
was it with a jaunty affect or a sneer?
Is it possible to have a jaunty sneer?
I should think it would involve a top hat.
Maybe some spats.

Carving out an ode to industrialism
is tough when the only tool one has is ice.

She imagined her prince would find her
without fanfare, maybe alone in the woods.
Maybe he’d be a villain or an angel-
which she thought, is perfect either way;
it doesn’t signify, since he may have a limp
and possibly be an albino.

A head of steam is only as strong as
the will to be led by such caprice.

She lingered over heads of lettuce as they
were misted in their neat pyramids, a
voyeur to the leafy pile. She could sense
the tomatoes watching from behind her,
nestled in crates, waiting for something
exciting, like war or a salad.

The heart beats the same (frantically)
whether the action is running or worry.

 

Transistor

Without turning, he heard her,
a willowy-whispery slip of a thing:
“Is it very dark at the other end of your tube?”
He wondered if there was a right answer.
He simply said, “Come with me.”
And she did.

Screaming prayer

Explain to me the mechanics
of force and favor
and how twilight
milks daydreams from the skin
and weaves them into
a taboo mise en scène
tantamount to a revelation
but with only once horse
in silhouette
and a song with no words;
show me where heather rambles
freely over rocky hillsides
and grassy tombs.

We will meet when we can count
the crumbs of our bones.
Our hearts will sing
a terrific screaming prayer.

It’s all bluster

It’s a small window
I look through most days.
There’s a sunrise and a sunset
I can barely stand to look at
because it’s too beautiful
for the likes of me.

I’m not her. Or the other her.
I age and expand.
I just made small talk
about wind and scarves
while part of my brain
was lost in your limbs and grin.
I’m a damned liar.

You’re not here
but you may as well be,
for you’re imprinted on me
like a bad tattoo
one wakes up to
after a drunken debauch.

When I’m weak,
I look out the window
and compare myself
to the elements.
I’m not the rain.
Or the other storm.
I’m a damned fool.

Capacitor

We’ve met before.
Your hat was jaunty
and your car was huge.
There was a war on
and we reveled in milk
and fresh apples.
There was gingham
and surprises.
We laughed in the sun.

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