If you’d let me, I would lift you up
so you could touch the moon.
But that is a fairytale thing to say,
and you’re so practical.
I’d move a mountain for you,
though you’d laugh and insist,
“Please don’t bother, the mountain’s fine
exactly the way it is.” I’d plant you a field
of Mariposa lilies or a garden of magnolia blooms,
but you would say, “Don’t trouble yourself.
All I want is you.” But what about a meteor
shower to light up the darksome nights?
Or a macaw to brighten up the room?
Or a Martian might be nice? “A Martian?”
you’d say? “Oh come on. That’s not even
real.” So I’d offer to take you fishing
for marlin. Or maybe for a blue gill? And you
would say, “I told you already, all I want is you.”
But I’d still try to offer you something—
something sweet like a marshmallow?
Something tasty like wild mushrooms?
Something humble like marigolds?
Something weird like a marmot with a mustache?
and you’d say, “Don’t you know
you’re fine just as you are. Bring me
you with your empty hands.”
Why do I find it so daunting
to come to you just as I am?
*an M poem for Lian Canty’s Alphabet Menagerie
The closing line (and the lead-up to it: “All I want is you.”) reminds me of a conversation I had just four mornings ago. Something along the lines of, “If people got to know me, then they wouldn’t like me, I fear.”
Re: You, Rosemerry, with regards to the penultimate line, I’ve never known you to ever be empty-handed.
You have touched on a common theme: wanting/needing to offer something, and feeling merely offering ourselves is not enough.
Mmm-mmm-mmmmm. I like this poem.
aww, thanks dear Eduardo
You are enough 🙂 r
And lots of great M&Ms in this one. I like the back&forth, the proposal&response.
Oh!