Poetry: Die Liebe Dauert
Die Liebe Dauert
Fool,
she said, groping
in
my breeches with
sagacious
dexterity,
Fabius
was mighty
but
he went backwards too,
and
left a stylish legend
twinkling
down the years.
She
started her handspiel,
but
how gladly I left
Paradise
and recoiled
from
her amorous grasp.
The
work, under her labor
had
grown, but disturbance
was
dismissed and
sitting
face to face,
like
Sappho's sole
daughters
our dactyls
touched
and led the way
to
quieter thoughts.
You're
my girl, I said,
with
molybdic seriousness,
as
I looked at her
sour
puss.
Auspicating
in
my
prophetic soul,
I
thought, beaming at her,
if
ever was a bed of steel,
here
'tis;
I'm
trapped like a goat
on
a precipice.
We
looked at each other
deeply
and harshly;
her
wit was as much
as
mine;
we
saw through each other,
fallen
from trust and truth
to
cunning and deceit.
But,
like a flash,
the
mood,
tender
and variable as a baby,
changes
once again and,
gracious
God, my pike
stirs,
she sees, and,
ye
heavenly host,
immodestly
conquers.
Jack D. Harvey’s poetry has appeared here, there and elsewhere on the internet (including A Thin Slice of Anxiety) and in paper.
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