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There's a painting by Botticelli I've always loved, showing Venus being born naked from the ocean and not fearing the current. Those around her renounce her body, scrambling to clothe her, turn her virginal, contain the way her eyes cross galaxies, shine all the way to Pluto. But she is soft, unwavering, not noticing the mortals' concern about her ******* and bare collarbone that could catch water at its base. I found you halfway across the world on the steps of the Uffizi and in the 3 hours it took you to show me some of the best art on earth, I was transfixed only on the orbits of planets in your eyes. Shortly before the sun set, you took me through the secret corridor Cosimo de' Medici built to walk across the rooftops of the city where you kissed me but told me you didn't believe in love, that all you needed was art, and Michelangelo, and in that moment I saw Venus in your collarbone. Saw a shell under your feet, saw the universe in the way your freckles connected, saw how you immortalize yourself among the rest of the art in Florence so no human can bring you down to earth, can make your heart stop, show you what it's like to cross timezones with a single touch. And here I am, wanting to be your Botticelli, to paint the uneven slope of your shoulders, the crookedness of your right ankle, your fear of exposing yourself to someone who could love you. It must be lonely out there, Venus, on your little fishing boat by the sea. Botticelli's painting was found long after his death, laid into the floor of an abandoned villa in the south of Tuscany. Venus looking lost and mortal between cracked paint and chipping walls, like the way you hide between the dusty statues of the dead statesmen and fading portraits long after the museum closes, just you with only history to hold. You want to believe in love as past-tense, like you've lost faith in present participles and the fact that art is still being made, and people are running barefoot into future conjugations together. Don't come back to land, Venus. Vanessa. I won't be here waiting with a towel or an art critic or a spaceship. But maybe, just make a little room for me on your shell under the sun, atop steady waves or Florentine rooftops. Throw the map overboard. Let's forget the shore. And Michelangelo and the rest of them will smile as they see us off.
0
Jul 28, 2015
Jul 28, 2015 at 5:18 PM UTC
And Michelangelo Agrees With Me
There's a painting by Botticelli I've always loved, showing Venus being born naked from the ocean and not fearing the current. Those around her renounce her body, scrambling to clothe her, turn her virginal, contain the way her eyes cross galaxies, shine all the way to Pluto. But she is soft, unwavering, not noticing the mortals' concern about her ******* and bare collarbone that could catch water at its base. I found you halfway across the world on the steps of the Uffizi and in the 3 hours it took you to show me some of the best art on earth, I was transfixed only on the orbits of planets in your eyes. Shortly before the sun set, you took me through the secret corridor Cosimo de' Medici built to walk across the rooftops of the city where you kissed me but told me you didn't believe in love, that all you needed was art, and Michelangelo, and in that moment I saw Venus in your collarbone. Saw a shell under your feet, saw the universe in the way your freckles connected, saw how you immortalize yourself among the rest of the art in Florence so no human can bring you down to earth, can make your heart stop, show you what it's like to cross timezones with a single touch. And here I am, wanting to be your Botticelli, to paint the uneven slope of your shoulders, the crookedness of your right ankle, your fear of exposing yourself to someone who could love you. It must be lonely out there, Venus, on your little fishing boat by the sea. Botticelli's painting was found long after his death, laid into the floor of an abandoned villa in the south of Tuscany. Venus looking lost and mortal between cracked paint and chipping walls, like the way you hide between the dusty statues of the dead statesmen and fading portraits long after the museum closes, just you with only history to hold. You want to believe in love as past-tense, like you've lost faith in present participles and the fact that art is still being made, and people are running barefoot into future conjugations together. Don't come back to land, Venus. Vanessa. I won't be here waiting with a towel or an art critic or a spaceship. But maybe, just make a little room for me on your shell under the sun, atop steady waves or Florentine rooftops. Throw the map overboard. Let's forget the shore. And Michelangelo and the rest of them will smile as they see us off.
poethands
Written by
Chicago
Jul 28, 2015
Jul 28, 2015 at 5:18 PM UTC
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