Even Earth cannot contain you,
Much less a temple I could build. And yet—
How like Lebanese forests you make me. My legs
Become a roof, my arm a wall;
From Woman you architect a Synagogue.
Man and child become Man and
Facing love we all become children.
Limbs rise and fall under white sheets in
Tandem, Man and Woman,
Building a Synagogue, clamoring Hosanna
For the Gardens they have chosen.
Limbs rise to build, if not a monument,
A small and focused flame.
I do not wish to wake unless I wake
To find my brow illumined by no sweeter sun
Than he. Of my
Own reflection I retract husbandry. It is a cistern
Which cannot hold water.
Love falls to the warmth of an altar
In defense of what is tangible,
In defense against that last white sheet, death.
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