Clementine
In my dream I saw a stiff creased mountain
And grass plains spreading out around it—
Small tomatoes popping their skin
In beef and pork broth and red wine.
You, my wild haired girl crawling
Over horse heads to ride bareback—
Your stark wildness sprouting like feathers,
Your running patterned
As oak, sequoia, madrone.
Charley the Catahoula churning circles
Through the shadowed grass lit only by stars—
Horses cropping that grass, one sorrel, one blood bay,
Peering in windows, sniffing brace posts.
My own blood fearful of the ever widening gaze
That must briefly forfeit the earth to the shape of a promise
Too full not to burst.
Damn those eyes.
I love you so much already.
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