Gacela of the Terrible Presence
Lorca, Federico GarcíaI desire that the water lose its river-bed.
I desire that the wind lose its valleys.
I desire that the night lose its eyes
and my heart be without its gold flower
That the oxen speak with the great leaves
and the earthworm die of darkness;
that the teeth of the skull shine
and yellow inundate the silk.
I can see the duel of wounded night
battling, coiled with midday.
I resist a sunset of green venom
and shattered arches where time suffers.
But do not light your pure nakedness
like a black cactus open in the rushes.
Leave me longing for obscure planets,
but do not show me your cool waist.
NOTE
A gacela is an Arabic poetic form, usually erotic in content.
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