With my heels to the brick, I am hanging out the window.
There is light without heat.
In the bedroom I am drenched in wine.
There is heat without light.
I pass myself by in the hallway;
Blood rushing to a musty head, thousands of strings running down to cold feet
I sing of barley and basil to the couches and armchairs
yellowed by pollen from the ever-open windows,
dust dancing in lemon illumination.
There is light without heat.
In the bedroom I am drenched in wine.
We are sucking electric crystals up to our brains,
sluggishly swigging from thin necks of thick green glass;
and we are smiling at each other’s soft faces, slowly becoming fragmented,
the pads of our finger tips adorned with grain and powder.
There is heat without light.
I pass myself by in the hallway;
my right hand
does not know my left.