from up on the pulpit
come far-off dronings of
nietzsche and positivism and
the problem with kant.
i don't really listen: i'm
too busy looking at you.
well, you. the back of your head
is all i can see, but i know
from experience (empirically) that
the front of your head
is pretty indeed.
in my head we go to
naxos, havana, vladivostok.
walk arm in arm across
mesopotamian sand,
washington valleys, the
strong red earth of martinique.
strangely, we don't fuck. sex
has nothing to do with
this particular fantasy,
which makes for a welcome change.
anyway: the lecture ends and
the anxiety starts fresh.
i run out as fast as i can
to avoid talking to anybody.
i can't see where you go,
i don't turn back to look,
but i'll be here tomorrow,
and hopefully so will you,
and then we'll have a crack at
constantinople. we'll
speak seven languages, we'll
play chess in coffeehouses, we'll
worry about invasions and plagues, we'll
smoke opium and invent croissants—
and later, when night's unwavering hand
has painted over evening's optimistic rose
we'll share the same bed
like kids. like childhood friends.