Ode on Love

Petra White

What he has taken of me

I don’t even want back,

I don’t want to want back.

This new happiness holds up

a novel mischief that waits in the near.

Why so indispensible?

Before I knew him I did not need him:

if he goes I must replace him,

as if I could. And that circling body-mashing doubt.

How he throws me

into dark and retrieves me!

And with gazes like little riffing flames inhabits me.

What does the bottom-most soul know of this –

that basin of us

concerned only with survival,

collecting residual passion

and washing clean,

shining up that bit of us

that cares nothing?

That idea that every lover is the same,

that there’s a template, a type,

that what I call all-but-worship’s not this man but an all-man man

likely to be just like my father:

being one man he is all,

many desires folded into one bright

bouquet of obsession that springs from the heart like Spring.

He is coasting along his own midnight.

The trapping of his breath, the only outward sign,

I devour it like meat,

as if it was him,

tenderly and watchfully in all love’s creepiness.

Love is a thing, the self’s

undoing that it begs for.

He twitches out hot shivers of love he shifts away from,

exalts and voids me

with the economy of a waiter emptying a whole table with one hand.

Power to love draws the long breath from me.

Petrarch made this a joy, an Other queening distance,

love never shaken by reality, never

whittled by exchange.

I fear whatever we have will puff like a daisy.

And if not?

Mutuality, mutability, love nuanced and grappled, hard.

This seam of encounters can’t peg itself down,

it is or isn’t, it is high or low, a scythe swinging in, or out.

The self tries to locate him, and itself

in all the moving signifiers of love,

lover and love, meaning and feeling,

things that says, love this one, not another.

I lie in bed scratching at the night.

Absent, his beauty

evaporates. He flickers before me,

knowable-unknowable, central lover, man-figure

skating so sweetly at the edge of a beauty.

How I hope against. How I want to know if he.

And love dares the self.

To risk what there is in hope of havocking more to risk.

Trying not to try to purloin him whole

but keep him near – to tell my heart so stupid!

The drawbridge clatters up.