Sunday, May 23, 2021

It Begins with the Trees by Ada Limón

It Begins with the Trees 

Two full cypress trees in the clearing
intertwine in a way that almost makes
 
them seem like one. Until at a certain angle
from the blue blow-up pool I bought
 
this summer to save my life, I see it
is not one tree, but two, and they are
 
kissing. They are kissing so tenderly
it feels rude to watch, one hand
 
on the other’s shoulder, another
in the other’s branches, like hair.
 
When did kissing become so
dangerous? Or was it always so?
 
That illicit kiss in the bathroom
of the Four-Faced Liar, a bar
 
named after a clock, what was her
name? Or the first one with you
 
on the corner of Metropolitan
Avenue, before you came home
 
with me forever. I watch those green
trees now and it feels libidinous.
 
I want them to go on kissing, without
fear. I want to watch them and not
 
feel so abandoned by hands. Come
home. Everything is begging you. 



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