Fables and Proverbs
i.
burlap, wire, aluminum foil, brown and shiny
maybe unwrapped easter kisses.
in the summer, we’ll leave the city or we won’t
a loitering menace
glittering in the streets, flag-waving, pot-smoking
borrow a cruiser from a friend and learn to skate
or buy a bike from the secondhand store off belmont
ride down lake shore
show off those sun-peeled shiny shoulders
sheltered by sleeves for just three more weeks now
and then it’s all popsicle-flavored forgetting
retrograde amnesia
every day we’ll fall in love with the yellow sky all over again
whisper to each other, boozy breath tickling our ears:
‘all is not gold, but almost.’
ii.
my thoughts are all
still sunday mornings and my head is
heavy with un-thoughts, non-worries, not
words. i’m painting my face gold
with the sun’s chunky ray-strokes unwashed brushes but
still beautiful. none of the almost.
iii.
but almost all is not gold.
things are packing up; nothing is safe anymore.
promises to stay in touch lipstick-linger on glass rims,
but things are not the same.
yellowing polaroids cover the streets,
all the tender leftover gold in their tendrils.
so it goes in these september blues:
returning his beat-up cruiser, i wear bruises as medals
for another sweetness survived.
but no saccharine summer had melted so exquisitely into my tongue
as this one. i savor its taste until my throat feels dry,
then cough it out with the common cold
and wipe it off my mouth.
Eva has been a writer since she knew how to write. She likes birds, cityscapes, thick coats of paint, wind, and singing russian folk songs to acoustic guitar.