Forgive me for killing
the houseplants again.
I have a penchant for stifling beauty
before it bursts forth—
loud and green as spring.
I once followed a man
from the train station
for whole city blocks—
in the freezing rain—
before realizing
that he was just another man
in another city
who didn’t look like you at all.
Is there a way to repent
for the things we haven’t yet done?
The crimes we haven’t committed?
How I would follow you—
as Persephone followed Hades
into the Underworld—
if only you would let me.
Queen of the Dead,
girl of two worlds,
I often find myself in graveyards.
Not to mourn the buried,
but to grieve for the living.
I bring them my dead flowers
as if that would make a difference.
And, like Demeter, mother to all,
savior to none, we sit and wait
for the release of a goddess,
and the return of spring.