My dearest Anne, I am living by a lake with a young man I met one week after you died.
His beard is red, his eyes flicker like cat’s eyes, & the amazing plum of his tongue sweetens my brain. He is like nobody since I love him. His **** sinks deep in my heart.
I have owed you a letter for months.
I wanted to chide the manner of your death the way I might have once revised your poem. You are like nobody since I love you, & you are gone.
Can you believe your death gave birth to me? Live or die, you said insistently. You chose the second & the first chose me. I mourned you & I found him in one week.
Is love the sugar-coated poison that gets us in the end? We spoke of men as often as of poems. We tried to legislate away the need for love – that backseat **** & death caressing you.
Why did you do it in your mother’s coat? (I know but also know I have to ask.) Our mothers get us hooked, then leave us cold, all full-grown orphans hungering after love.
You loved a man who sopoe “like greeting cards.” “He ***** me well but I can’t talk to him.” We shared that awful need to talk in bed. Love wasn’t love if we could only speak in tongues.
& the intensity of unlove increased until the motor, the running motor could no longer power the driver, & you, with miles to go, would rather sleep.
Between the pills, the suicide pills & our giggly vodkas in the Algonquin… Between your round granny glasses & your eyes blue as glaciers… Between your stark mother-hunger & your mother courage, you knew there was only one poem we all were writing.
No competition. “The poem belongs to everyone & God.” I jumped out of your car suicide car & into his arms.
Your death was mine I ate it & returned.
Now I sit by a lake writing to you. I love a man who makes my finger ache. I type to you off somewhere in the clouds. I tap the table like a spiritualist.
*** is a part of death; that much I know. You voice was earth, your eyes were glacier-blue. Your slender torso & long-stemmed American legs drape across this huge blue western sky.
I want to tell you “Wait, don’t do it yet.” Love is the poison, Anne, but love eats death.