O cloud head, loping with raw rain, take this breath in your breezy ferry street by street into the east, where she sits cradled in lamplight while fistfuls of autumn's mane slap across brick dark as sherry. O cloud head, kneaded and greased by the blue fingers of humid night, give over my breath and tell her I'll be waiting for tomorrow to reclaim it from her parted lips; tell her that my brain purrs with fever, and every red borough of my body still feels her insistent grip.