a dragon’s love song
They ask me:
Why don't you write love poems anymore?
And I look at them,
and I wonder
what they're hearing
if they cannot hear
the love within these words.
Just because I don't use
flowers and starlight and chocolate
does not mean this
is not a love poem.
Just because it isn't
soft or sweet or gentle
does not mean that this
is not a love poem.
Love is not, actually, gentle.
Love is not, actually, sweet.
Love is not, actually, soft.
Love is not flowers
or chocolate
or starlight.
Or at least, that's not
all that love is.
If I open my mouth
and all that you hear
is anger and pain and violence
then you're not
listening closely enough.
Because this is a Dragon's Love Song,
and that must be sung
in Fire and in Blood.
It is fire that lights
your way in the night;
it is fire that warms
you in the cold, that keeps you
going when everything
else around you stops.
It is blood that courses through
your veins, that courses through
my veins, that spills
on the streets
on the sheets
in our words and
sometimes we don't even notice
we're walking through it.
This is a Dragon's Love Song
and believe me it is for you —
whether you are the knight at the gates
the Damsel in the Tower
or the dragon on guard.
This is a Dragon’s Love Song,
and that love is Fierce and Strong and Unending,
because this love is Fire
and this love is Blood.
So, when they ask me
Why don't you write love poems anymore?
I respond with a slow, slow smile
and a long, deep exhale through the nose
that carries a small wisp of smoke.