What leaves us trembling in an empty house is not the moon, my moon-eyed lover. Say instead there was no moon though for nine nights we stood on the brow of the hill at midnight and saw nothing that was not contained in darkness, in the pier light, our hands, and our lost house. Small wonder that we tired of this and chose instead to follow the road to the back of the island, and broke into the lighthouse-keeper’s house. We found the lower windows boarded up and the doors held fast, but one. Inside, we followed the drag of light through empty rooms of magenta and sky blue. This house has been decided by the sea. These rooms are stones washed over by waves and spray from the lighthouse by which we undress to kneel under the skylight. Our hands and lips are smeared with blackberries. Your skin, my sloe-skinned lover, never so sweet, your hand so quiet. The sea is breaking and unbreaking on the pier. You and I are making love in the lighthouse-keeper’s house, my moon-eyed, dark-eyed, fire-eyed lover. What leaves us trembling in an empty room is not the swell of darkness in our hands, or the necklace of shale I made for you that has grown warm between us.
A blog dedicated to poetry - some new, some old, some of it mine, most of it not. Run with it.
Friday, 24 June 2011
Shale - Vona Groarke
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