24 June 2023

And my lower body, beneath the navel—sometimes a nature preserve,
wild, frightening, amazing, an unpreserved preserve,
and sometimes a Japanese garden, concentrated, full of
forethought.

1 comment

  1. Yehuda Amichai

    My life is the gardener of my body. The brain—a hothouse closed tight
    with its flowers and plants, alien and odd
    in their sensitivity, their terror of becoming extinct.
    The face—a formal French garden of symmetrical contours
    and circular paths of marble with statues and places to rest,
    places to touch and smell, to look out from, to lose yourself
    in a green maze, and Keep Off and Don’t Pick the Flowers.
    The upper body above the navel—an English park
    pretending to be free, no angles, no paving stones, naturelike,
    humanlike, in our image, after our likeness,
    its arms linking up with the big night all around.
    And my lower body, beneath the navel—sometimes a nature preserve,
    wild, frightening, amazing, an unpreserved preserve,
    and sometimes a Japanese garden, concentrated, full of
    forethought. And the penis and testes are smooth
    polished stones with dark vegetation between them,
    precise paths fraught with meaning
    and calm reflection. And the teachings of my father
    and the commandments of my mother
    are birds of chirp and song. And the woman I love
    is seasons and changing weather, and the children at play
    are my children. And the life my life.

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