You children,
with your little loud voices,
let it echo all over the grass. |
A gaggle of girls You children, with your little loud voices, let it echo all over the grass. How joy comes to your small hands, your crouching secret giggles and your hair-band wrists. How does it feel? All the palm fronds and the shivering grass are long hair leaning backward, as if the earth were being tilted. The lily pads lifted up like napkins. Dipping their doe legs in the pond. Its smudge-brown doesn’t paint them; they come out like the backs of fish. Sunny hair and bunched up underwear they leave water thumb-prints on the gray stones. Round dimples of stickers all up their arms. You little girls with your great big souls. Your bodies know things that mine has forgotten. My body knows my hips and my thighs. Sometimes it feels like the unbounded earth. The roundness and the cool darkness inside of plums. Like the touching of all other women’s bodies in the holding and folding and laying down of my own. One afternoon in the grass you’ll lay an arm across one breast and I’ll ask you, How does it feel now, these things your body knows? |