Tags
all that's forbidden, alone, poem, Poetry, sonnet, star gazing, Walt Whitman
— I am not naked under summer sky.
There’s so much forbidden to me; so much
you and I can’t do. Here’s our lullaby:
we’d sit on a grassy hill at night, touch
of heat in the air, and with night’s orphans,
crickets, we would sing to you. But twilight
is when you must go home and the heavens
always seem empty without you. Tonight
I’ll sit on our hill and star-gaze. Our future
feels far away, a void full of star-beams
and dark. You can’t join me. I can’t join you.
But if we could — we could — we would whisper
secrets under stars. My heart pounding, dreams
within dreams within all that we can’t do.
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“go freely with powerful uneducated persons and with the young and with the mothers of families” — Walt Whitman