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A poem about a man and a woman. |
| The Evening It starts with a man and a woman, when everything tastes of apples, like handfuls of earth sweet from the ground, the texture of tongue callusing skin, frail and red, and each aftertaste, a ringing of cider inside a soft mouth, from the apples spiced slowly in barrels freshly hewn from rough trees, their leaves, fallen from bodies and strewn on the ground, covering it in green like the woman’s eyes, or the skin of serpents, whose hisses pierce flesh, and turn the cider bitter, mouths tasting like barrels used too frequently, the decay of wood mixing with rotting seeds of the blood-red fruit. |