May I write a Shakespearian sonnet on the square inches of skin between your thumb joint and elbow? I’m a pretty good storyteller, I can narrate in blank verse if you wish. Can I write poetry on your spine? Up and down in broken haikus, tankas quilting along the curve of your sides. Perhaps a sestina? So be it. I can work bay leaves into tea cakes. May I write alliterations across your toes, over finger bones and broken knuckles? I have enough form poems to paint my walls a matte black. Gloppy ink blobs, carnation stamps, over raised red lines of a villanelle.3 Can I write poetry on your stomach? I have soft ballad-dipped brushes that leak cinnamon sugar. Acrostic biographies written to a jazz tune, papier-mâchéd into a handmade piñata. Spider web hair pins left in the bathroom sink spell out another useless cinquain. May I write a rondeau on your calves, rising up into your knees? Epitaphs in your running shoes make limericks out of the hail in your back yard. Don’t try super gluing petals back onto stems, they’ll fall apart eventually. Poetry is written on you like paper.