Lost Ellen
You are cavitating, spinning outward,
A blade without purchase, carving at a vacuum.
I dance to your heartbeat and breathing.
Your hands are on me, contiguous and light, like staghorn fronds.
I taste you, a pale tang of lime
And skate around the room alone, blue with hoar frost, lust and rime.
I weep prostatic tears, viscous, inappropriate and thrilling.
Who will we be when we give up these stones, this ice and distance.
–Bill Schubart, Fall 1990