“Unnamed objects. The fear dispersed like the sound of angry peacocks. The white ones. So still in the aviary. We opened the rock. This time I saw the god offer with out-stretched hand the heart to be devoured. The lakes flowed into my hands. Dante would say the lake of the heart. Two men sit in a tree and wink and spit Now this is the tree where Amor sits. He gave them each a trinket of flesh. The rules he sighed, are in the wrinkled grass when the find goes by seeking itself or jealousy. One imagined two small windows cut in his skin. His breasts look out upon the tree. The other thought the shape of his tongue was poetry. The word, he said, drawn like an arrow, so fits into the body of the bird it hits.” — “The shadow of the fish lies among the rocks. The shadow of the sage brush turns the hill blue. The shadow of the mountain includes all strangers. (The strangulation will appear in the brush fire.) The coyotes, burned out of their lairs, follow the railroad. Shapes of poems fly out of the dark. The tree spoke: Love is not love. Imagine your first stupor. The effort to untie the strings of the loins. The lips endure the semen of strangers. It is spring when the shadow of willows is gone.” — “The intensities of these branches of willow open. What is it broke the skin? How lovely that jewel of under the skin. Neither dark nor light is my true love. The blood whose beauty crosses the hand like money will fight for that true love.” — “Two men sit in a tree. How ugly they are in the bright eye of this pageantry. In service to love is dignity, one cried, 1, 2, 3, the other replied, you’re out when the dew falls from imagination’s dark. Amor turned geometer, briefly, of course, and cut their bodies into triangular parts. When reassembled they hung in that tree, their genitals placed where their heads should be.” — “This year the herds move far out into the sagebrush toward the foothills. Suddenly, the aspens, like herds themselves, fill the gullies. This is the darker blue you see from the highway. The dew fell from imagination’s dark on to our hands where it stuck like bark. The wheels of your heart, Amor cried, roll around the edge of the fire. You might imagine, in service to love, your hands dip out the water the shell or sperm, dropped there in passing by some ashen likeness.” — “Amor entered disguised as grass. You both hoped your seed would fall among the roots of this tree and there grow up a second tree and guardian. WHAT IS THAT WRINKLES UNDER THE ROOT? SKIN, SEMEN, AN ARM AND A FOOT.” — “The breath stutters in limbs where Amor swings. The realism he’s after cheats and sings. He drops the steel scales of his body down where one eye out, the lover turns round and round.”