You sleep in a golden box, it seems, On India patterns of rose and tangerine. The brightening sky sends amber light Through ecru lace and lowered blinds. I imagine your lithe limbs stretched out Beneath the coarse blanket you love. Your rustic side has always shied Away from luxury and ease. Sometimes you even refuse to eat, So I tempt you with a favorite repast Things meant to break unwarranted fast. And often, I ask you to show me Your lean limbs and boyish length. As you poise upon the scale That balances youth and strength. But at night you leave our tryst And drive a phaeton of amethyst To a place no longer gold, Where you make diamonds out of coal. Where they drain you 'til day is dawning And batter down your soul. Yet it seems you revive each morning In your pretty box of gold.