Let me photograph us in
the swaying branches and summer light.
How the low wind dances along
the curves of your red lips,
And the gold rush of the sun
ignites on your skin.
Let me snap the shivering metaphor
of how close you're to me —
A braided metaphor consecrated in
blood and fevered beauty.
'Cause I don't want us to get older, darling.
This might be the last time of us
together in the grey-green woods,
humming folk songs and kissing in the yellow light.
The dark wine spills from your limbs
and soaks our clothes;
We're too young to face our fears —
and I don't want this to end in the blue of winter.
So let me photograph tender impossibilities
and tragic euphoria, staining our hearts
in pitch-black letters of mundane love.
How reckless that things would not be the same
the next time the red of the sun burns the horizon;
Our fingers weave another firefly glow —
my favorite folk song.
-autumn emeralds fade away in the wastelands of broken reds
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A/N: I wanted this to be the last poem of my collection, but self-control isn't my forte. A quick vote, please? Thanks!
©March 19, 2023. Sreeja Naskar
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the slow art of breathing bitter
Poetryslow dancing love and pain in the midnight chorus of liquor-washed autumn green ... || a constellation of destructive poetry ||