I’ve aged
even in dreams.
But not you, my boundless soul
so alluring in your constancy,
turning toward me
with the expression
of a college love
I’d nearly forgotten,
turning in orange light
with one shoulder to the shadow
of your back room.
In my sleep
the dead come to play
with time.
They live beyond their counted words
and say fresh things meant to trouble me
back into your arms.
Old women wide as night
watch from the corners
of my sheets.
Were they to speak
it would be the ocean
finding caves, feeling sand.
How intimately
they know the earth;
on twilit smoky evenings
they comb their hair
with pine forests
and have no use for words
that merely tell
a man
what the moon
means.
But they are not you.
My body
this stone bridge
will crumble
when you
cross over
to their gray wisdom.
From my collection, Twenty Poems to the Beloved
Published in Sky Island Journal, #5, Summer, 2018
Orange River
Jennifer Marysia Landretti