how even come midnight
that mockingbird repeats
a wren’s tart call, the pitch-high
sigh of porch swings, the creaking frog song.
Mockingbird ajazz with naming
his love, he tastes
every echo’s tone
for the ways it woos her,
yet hungers for that grain
of quiet, its tang hanging
between those mimicries. From that hush
he will weave a melody, his
own whispering
name for her. He savors
its timbre, how it fits
the exact shape of her
who returns to him each spring.
Like the mockingbird who sings all night,
I’m calling you names from old-time
love songs: sugar
sugar, my honey
baby, my love at last.
Or tomato, because
of the pining ache I hear
when two-year old Emma begs “mato
mato” from my plate. Someday
I will fashion
a name suiting you,
a song you’ll whisper back
to me like mockingbirds
do, like Pap-Paw and Granny
calling each other “Pos,” short for opossum,
Pos for the zestful happiness
opossums find while
eating persimmons.
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