The Scientist
Wednesday, September 14, 2011 at 11:35PM Sometimes I forget my own name.
I forget my own name
Until he says it out loud.
I hear it bloom from his mouth
Like an exotic flower
Like the red Latin ribbon
Wrapped round an insect otherwise ordinary
Speyeria idalia
Sweet dreams, Andrea
And I don’t know who he means,
What golden-eyed girl his whispers
Are rushed toward.
I am frightened to blink
Frightened I’ll think it to death
A breath, and I’ll flutter away
While he scrambles, pleads
Stay.
So I hover on faith
While he sketches me slowly
Into a scientific journal
A little lined diary he keeps in his pocket
While strolling this island
Of beetles and tortoises
Lizards and finches
Long, lava trenches
And high mountain vistas
Vast pebbled beaches
And low lying mist.
He kissed me like he was planting a flag
And I thought
I want him to name me
I want him to claim me for his own
To peel me like a smooth-skinned grape
To slice me wide open from navel to nape
Then pin me limb by limb
Heart by lung and head by tongue
So pink and proud
So bright and loud
But crushingly silent.
I want to be violently exposed
And told what I am
How I fit into life
By a man who makes and unmakes me
With a pen and a knife.
poem,
poets beyond reason,
scientist in
poetry,
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