I wonder if what she means is fully known?
I want to be known by the cabinet of your being—
its zenith of laughter and its burdens that flutter
towards me. Terrance writes that “making love
to yourself matters more than what you learn when
loving someone else” but I’m not sure he’s right.
I prefer the nugget of otherness, the scuff of your
thought; the simple anatomy of two lyric selves.
What would Rilke say about lovers in a pandemic,
alone, from his borrowed castle, pacing the halls
after midnight muddling the cook’s dreams?
Unable to sleep or pray there’s nothing left for us
but to bring our refuged bodies together. Not a departure
from the day exactly, just a distilled thimble of pleasure
of scent—like the ancient colognes in the Musée du Parfum
in Paris—alive and animated within us; still waiting, still wanting.