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May 2016
A waxy, dimpled orb in my hand,
A tiny sunrise, sweet and sharp.

One nail-blade incision and the
Peel tears away when you find the foothold,
Then coursing acid fires through your cuts and bruises,
Burning and tasting wounds with sharp recoil taste,
An acerbic spark.

Pith lodges under my nails,
Tang cloys beneath my nose.
The fruit now pulled apart, the ceremony over,
Segments of the sun lie exposed.
Eat half and half a year you'll remain.

The stringy web of white
Latticing the fruit-flesh
Is a pain to unentwine
What with the juice.

An explosion when you pierce the pocket,
And the gamble of what the burst will be.
Hedge your bets by eating the tasteless ones too.
Then the bathos of a pip
(the pebble inside the fruit, too small to be a stone)
Punctuates the sweetness you'd been enjoying.
Now the fumbling spat to get it out.

And after all the effort it's flavourless,
And you ask was it worth it?
Wasn't even really orange.
'Nothing rhymes with orange.'
'No, it doesn't.'
Summer 2016
Toby Lucas
Written by
Toby Lucas  UK
(UK)   
1.1k
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