First, I had had a thought so
unnerving




  • I went cold all over, in the heat.
    What if I




  • love this man, whom I hardly know,



  • more than I’ve loved any other man, and at



  • once I was a water fountain,



  • at grammar school, in the hall,
    a bubbler,




  • I was bubblering, I had turned into



  • a water-bearer who couldn’t bear but



  • blubbered her water with gulpy
    blubbers




  • on a hot summer day. Years ago,



  • I had been a sudden desert
    fountain




  • most days, at old love’s fresh sudden end.



  • And now, here I am, again,



  • but not in my cherryskin armor,
    again,




  • not with my cherry bow and
    juice-tipped




  • arrows and dried cherry
    jerkin




  • and quiver, and cherry scenthound—not that



  • aging cherry Artemis again, it feels



  • different, now, with this humorous
    curious




  • man, I feel as if we may be



  • the distilled fruit, the liquor itself, as if I’m



  • in the interior of
    new love’s




  • mouth, I am safe, under his
    tongue.




  • And under my own tongue, look



  • who you see—look!, perfectly safe, it is he.