*lines in italics are from Jane Eyre
Are you apprehensive of the new sphere you are about to enter?
Because I fear
For the warm skin
Between your shoulder
And collarbone,
The slick hair
That coils at the nape
Of your neck.
I had cherished the thought of one day seeing him: now, I never should.
He is like the scent of briar-roses–sickly-sweet in summer,
Humming through the wood with the frogs and midnight jasmine,
Burnt to memory by October. Once pooling in my pores,
Now soft as a song against my tongue.
I used to write poems, when nights were thick with thoughts of him.
I want to know him again,
But his scent is gone from my wrists.
The restlessness was in my nature; it agitated me to pain sometimes.
And so I ran, windswept, after you
And wrote you into songs that sounded like
Jeans and lemonade, since I was bored of his agate eyes
And moonstone bones. I wanted you,
My pyrite. Did the moon hang
Like a dish of gold or butter, and call to me?
I have always wanted to scream back.
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