Sunday, February 04, 2007

There We Were

There we were
standing by the water,
the stream rolling by
over and around obstacles;
a limb.

You said, “What now?”
I said I loved you.
You said, “Is it time?”
A child answered
yes.

You bent to kiss me then,
and kiss me again.
your lips were soft.
I fell into you
and the frothing, watery
turbulence.

4 comments:

Inanna said...

Or, I could say in the last stanza:

"I fell into you and the watery
turbulence."

So that each stanza has the same number of lines.

Suggestions?

Anne Amazing said...

I like the extension of the stanza, because of the imagery--frothing, watery turbulence. It extends the image...

does that make sense?

Anonymous said...

"A child answered yes..." That's beautiful E, it doesn't get any better than that. I don't think I have any suggestions. If I had written this - and I wish I had - I probably would have edited 'a limb' out because for some reason I don't want it there. But that's pretty subjective. As far as frothing is concerned, I like it precisely because it's asymmetrical, kind of like -- well, you know, frothy stuff.

selftaughtgirl said...

I find myself "taken out of" the piece when I read the word limb, but otherwise, this is lovely. I read "a child said yes" as a younger and innocent self, standing on a precipice and about to dive into its adult self, all of the complication, etc.