because love when cut, lets loose an empire of blood:
i have in my lips, a treaty of oblivion— releasing an embittered lemon.
in the throne of the sea, waves repeat the crash of perfidy. by the mountains they ride, the thick air of strobe.
rocks receive the genital fire of lighthouses exposing intones of shadow one by one.
the beast maimed behind the zither of trees makes no sound like an aleph.
i herald the collusion of night and children and weep at the solicitude of mothers,
because pines swoon in the dark and with its hand, the gentlest war threshes the flesh and blood, raining on us forever.
hostile eyes bypass the silence of things and lovers closing doors repeatedly, disrupting the vale from its slumber.
it is because when love is let loose, it releases both of us — weary, inescapably ripe with the wind, looking for each other as doves do in flight, separate and obscured, opening gates;
nightfall: the savage aroma of wood on the leaves that sway fervently tippling away from boughs.