Between question and answer runs a river of blood each question births its own fierce reply. Silence is a shroud we drape over the self, and in the age of ****, silence is a crown of fire. Poetry sheds its skin of metaphor, naked and raw; the question strips the poem to its bleeding bones. Strike a poet with your thought but beware, deepen your metaphor before you knock. I have heard the clumsy verdicts of my time ears deaf to beauty, tongues sharpened as swords. I answered harsh when the hour demanded battle, sweet when the story’s soul cried for grace. Rhymes are prisons and wings alike; sometimes I pass through as a ghost, more often they seize me in a tempest, and I pour the hunger of my craft into their veins. I drank deep from the storm of eloquence, kept wild bees buzzing in the nectar of the line, drove wolves from the bloodied pool of metaphor, wrestled lions in the arena of chaos and form. I have played the lute that blooms like a war cry for the cities and for the Bedouins’ raw, untamed howl. I have read to poets whose hair turned to silver ash, while their verse remained green poems born in joy, and poems that claw at the guts of grief. Some verses are prayers that thunder like storms, some are lust’s own savage offspring; from these, I have cleansed myself like washing away a dark, ancient curse. Poems are women, each a flame, each a world of light and shadow. And beauty itself is a poem a young woman distilled from the fierce nectar of femininity. Yet still I devour poems.