Talking about the Wind
Talking about the Wind Katie Peterson I hate to invoke the seasons. They dismantle(拆除,取消) us. We do the same to them. I hate to say the spring. It's become bone-deep routine. Nice going, May, permission or bluster, even the little leaves that top the cottonwoods, you take (shrunk coinage) you take charge and a share of everything, leaving the roots and skeletons of these, who say obscenities(淫秽), they've been wanting to say them to you all year, with what you've done, do now, and soon will. Opposites I say, always the most taxing. That one tree without moving willing to walk into the wind all by her heroic lonesome until my eyes move and her branches tie her to a sister next to her. Even my winnowing self, which loves distinctions, confuses her with her. With these actions your world takes off a layer from us. A hand mimes a knife drop, as practice. I'm close to nothing all at once, and it makes small sense, as much as talking about the wind as an amount, paid or refused. Or throwing my love as I always do over sleeping things, the slow, and what the wind makes by blowing over, and then throwing myself over my love— |