Shakespeare, gazing into a waning sky, said that her eyes were nothing like the sun. Collins, picking fruit from trees, said that she is not the purple wind in the orchard.
To follow this long trend of un-blazoned poetry, I want to share with the world that you are not the Charlie Parker jazz jumping from the mouth of a black Phillips
radio, nor are you the paper that I am writing this first draft on, nor the morning coordinate geometry that puzzled me today (or maybe you
are). Even more so, you are not the moon- light staining trees, the stack of 18th century British literature in the study, your grandmotherβs painting in the dining
room. Nonetheless, you are you: masterful, opinionated, understanding; a beloved whose beauty is better left unmentioned in some new age poetry.