Poem
Craig Arnold
Pitahaya
Pitahaya
Pitahaya
Teach me a fruit of yourcountry I asked and so you dipped
into a shop and in your hand
held me a thick yellow pinecone
no knife between us
you put it to your teeth
sideways like a bird and bit
and peeled away the fleshy
scales or were they petals
crisp white at the core
peppered with black seeds
sweet and light like a cold cloud
like some exotic sherbet carried
hand over hand from a mountaintop
by a relay of runners straightway
to the Inca’s high table
we sat on metal chairs
still pebbled with rain the seat
of my pants damp we passed it
back and forth no matter how
carefully we could not help
spilling the juice making
our cheeks sticky our fingers
getting sticky our fingers no
not even once touching
© 2013, Craig Arnold
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Poems of Craig Arnold
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Pitahaya
Teach me a fruit of yourcountry I asked and so you dipped
into a shop and in your hand
held me a thick yellow pinecone
no knife between us
you put it to your teeth
sideways like a bird and bit
and peeled away the fleshy
scales or were they petals
crisp white at the core
peppered with black seeds
sweet and light like a cold cloud
like some exotic sherbet carried
hand over hand from a mountaintop
by a relay of runners straightway
to the Inca’s high table
we sat on metal chairs
still pebbled with rain the seat
of my pants damp we passed it
back and forth no matter how
carefully we could not help
spilling the juice making
our cheeks sticky our fingers
getting sticky our fingers no
not even once touching
Pitahaya
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