Up in the sky, this late in the day,
the sun and the moon face off.
The sun is a big orange ball,
the moon sheer as rice paper.
The lighthouse on Love Point
is lost in the glare.
It rises needle-like,
but nobody lives there.
Backlit by the sun, two
swans glide on the bay,
not touching each other,
not pulling away.
Two, two of a kind,
we walk the narrow, unkempt path,
one behind the other,
avoiding the saw-toothed trap
that waits for a small thing’s hunger
as the hunter waits in his blind,
taking aim at the sun and the moon
in the cross-hairs of the gun.
The swans rise ‘soul in soul,’
as the hunter brings down the sun,
their cries as they circle above
all unutterable names for love.