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A ritual, I shape an acacia from your flesh and blood – the fluff rather concealed. So are we, though your insides decorate a globe just shy of blonde cornfields. Tomorrow, you can be the columbine’s milk, split drops deserting her center: now a park of petals on the edge. But I examine every exposed hipbone, your clavicles rosy by me – there is something around a jonquil about this image you spread so I can embrace you, answer coils like a telephone and want as much far away as I would close up to flaxen. Hand me a celandine capsule or periwinkle bow – all of this tied in a knot, originated from a bend of your hair. I have recollections and joy from imminent meadows, girl and boy.
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Apr 14, 2013
Apr 14, 2013 at 4:29 PM UTC
body/blossom language
A ritual, I shape an acacia from your flesh and blood – the fluff rather concealed. So are we, though your insides decorate a globe just shy of blonde cornfields. Tomorrow, you can be the columbine’s milk, split drops deserting her center: now a park of petals on the edge. But I examine every exposed hipbone, your clavicles rosy by me – there is something around a jonquil about this image you spread so I can embrace you, answer coils like a telephone and want as much far away as I would close up to flaxen. Hand me a celandine capsule or periwinkle bow – all of this tied in a knot, originated from a bend of your hair. I have recollections and joy from imminent meadows, girl and boy.
Loosely based off of a line from one of John Moffatt's poems, who is one of my fellow poets on here and is extremely talented. Also, this makes more sense if you know a bit about the meaning of certain flowers.
sarina
Written by
American
Apr 14, 2013
Apr 14, 2013 at 4:29 PM UTC
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