and even as ease enters her eyes and her black hair drops,
i judge her no less, and count myself no more friend,
because she will be drunk again. parked near her, sobered
in her car, she shows a temporary side
by the moonlit rise of the hills, waves crashing
and giving themselves to her new baptism.
suppose the sounds and sights, the hinges on gates
slow in smooth clicks and scrapes of rust as raven’s croak
in autumn. the next day, the hostess sees off her guests,
wine glass raised. where is she, my wife? she is buried
alive in oaken barrels white as the dress she wears to bed
she’d not removed, on sojourn to fruited Olympus where she
hoofs to it, carrying grapes to the mad lover for his shindig
in a forest with fauns and faeries, goblets, and all the rural gods.
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