9.08.2022

tiny, irascible, nectar-addicted puritans

Talking with my beloved in New York 
I stood at the outdoor public telephone 
in Mexican sunlight, in my purple shirt. 
Someone had called it a man/woman 
shirt. The phrase irked me. But then 
I remembered that Rainer Maria 
Rilke, who until he was seven wore 
dresses and had long yellow hair, 
wrote that the girl he almost was 
"made her bed in my ear"
and
"slept me the world." 
I thought, OK this shirt will clothe the other in me. 
As we fell into long-distance love talk 
a squeaky chittering started up all around, 
and every few seconds came a sudden loud 
buzzing. I half expected to find 
the insulation on the telephone line 
laid open under the pressure of our talk 
leaking low-frequency noises. 
But a few yards away a dozen hummingbirds, 
gorgets going drab or blazing 
according as the sun struck them, 
stood on their tail rudders in a circle 
around my head, transfixed 
by the flower-likeness of the shirt. 
And perhaps also by a flush rising into my face, 
for a word—one with a thick sound, 
as if a porous vowel had sat soaking up 
saliva while waiting to get spoken, 
possibly the name of some flower 
that hummingbirds love, perhaps 
"honeysuckle
" or
"hollyhock" 
or
"phlox"—just then shocked me 
with its suddenness, and this time 
apparently did burst the insulation, 
letting the word sound in the open 
where all could hear, for these tiny, irascible, 
nectar-addicted puritans jumped back 
all at once, fast, as if the air gasped. 
 

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