When she touches me, I feel her touching Herself, though she circles my shape into Oneness, I sometimes feel— detached Within those arms. In her startled-fall To sleep, imperceptibly, she gathers The room from her vexing childhood. Drawing the air and curling in waves— My hair, as if she were weaving some kind Of shelter.
When I touch her, it is with desire. My reach untangles the very dream Which took thirty five years of dull Existence to unmuddle— to imagine, My soul's other.
Ten fingers envelop her body Like splits of lightning— rippling skyward From wholly, bone-dun-desert, floor and there, In that rose-journey of unbridled touch, The shock of thunder makes a mother Of the sky. When she breaks her water The blighted earth that was sung— given My name, becomes her light, awakening Child.