a
love poem
I want to
say your name
the way
Jesus said, “Mary,”
at the
unstopped tomb, when he was
halfway
resurrected, unwrapped
but not
ascended, spirit and body
in that
fragile, persistent mix.
“Mary,” he
said, and she knew him.
“Mary,” and
she must have moved toward him
for he said,
do not touch me now
I am between
things.
“Mary,” he
said, and she changed, as if
an hour
earlier she had been a child, Her name
held all of
her and it was his gift.
He said it
once, which was forever.
I would say
yours once, to seal
who you are,
why I’ve stayed.
“Mary,” he
said (I would say your name)
and the wind
blew between the letters.
Stars hung
low over the peaks of the M
and in the a, a world orbited.
It is almost as if Jesus hadn't quite finished his regeneration cycle.
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