by Ashley Anna McHugh
after The Birth of Venus by Botticelli
Our voices hurled like stones across the sea
between us, amplified by empty rooms.
Night after night, that lightning strikes the tree.
We smolder down to embers and the fumes
swarm like a cloud of hornets overhead.
Our glacier melts against a mountain range.
We march like wounded soldiers up to bed,
eyes still as snipers. Nothing seems to change.
Doesn’t the choice seem simple? Stay or leave.
No knife can cut us clean, not anymore.
I’ll tell you the truth: no lover would believe
that Venus simply coasted to the shore.
Dragged by the breakers, gasping, draped in weeds—
Love claws through jagged waves toward what it needs.
Last updated August 26, 2022