Take Me Autumn
The last raspberries of autumn
drip with blood,
sing in my bones
as sweetly as the squeal of
the violin bow on string.
Dark chocolate and clementines
are decadent for me,
rich as maple sap
that’s been boiled and boiled
until there’s nothing left but burnt sweet.
Pumpkins are ripe for me
the way my breasts are ripe for
my boyfriend as he
runs hand over pearled mound
again and again and again.
Cat fur is soft as cold-Saturday morning kisses
when there’s nothing to do but lie in
bed,
stroking skin and listening to heart beats.
The bareness of a November birch
strikes me
the way an ovulation cramp pinches,
such beautiful violence.
The skin of the molasses chestnut is
smooth as glass,
flesh like a chicken,
and when it fills my mouth
I have eaten autumn whole,
consumed her fruits greedily,
on fire with my appetite.
Nutmeg, cloves, cinnamon,
allspice, ginger, cocoa and cardamom
sizzle my nostrils sumptuously
leave my skin hot underneath,
whetted for barefoot-midnight dances,
winds that breathe moist and fresh
as dog’s breathe.
Out with the green,
in with the scarlet,
witches dance,
cauldrons brew with turkey soup,
buttered scones on the table,
all the roses stop blooming
and the wind teases with snow on its tip.
But I am here,
ready,
take me Autumn,
take me
and let me burn the way
your leaves burn,
let me bleed
the way your raspberries bleed
and let me dance the night away
barefoot in your courtyard
of dying trees.