I want to fold up Constantinople And tuck it in the crease of my pocket With a rock and a harlequin opal, Nestled against your map of Nantucket — A keepsake framed by a tired locket.
Sunlight pours past panes like gold tapestries, Blue-sky-checkmates belonging to Vermeer And his Woman with a Balance — trophies: A man crowned a chivalrous cavalier, A gentleman of this tremendous sphere
Misunderstood by societal norms, And expectations set by precedent. All while a bird coos cucurucu, warmed By yellow light, freed from discontented Murmurs with song. I want to read segments
Of the map on the curved back of your hand, Knuckle-mounds like the knees of a woman You once said you loved between shorthanded Compliments and the words of Walt Whitman — Blanketed by a bible and a man.
Maybe our web-tangled thoughts coexist With the sky, place our feet firm on the ground. Or maybe they’re a window that insists On temptations, the mind, rewritten sounds, Coming alive, and wanting to be found.