Moving my hand I rub on the silk,
that covers the face I can feel.
Pulled as far up and then again down,
her eye's open wide as it pops.
Pink as far, as far as is seen and no rest,
from the end, to my belly and back, on a string
and the ache of the heart never seen.
Queer is the feeling I get from rubbing the silk,
under the touch of the moon.
Inside, side to side, the length and the depths
you do dream.
A feather here can't be felt, though the thumb
Rubbing, rubs until it grows numb, oil flows
from the bud of the rose.
There is nothing about small that she likes,
his trying to look in side the wide pupils, her eyes.
Not being her father, her brother or uncle,
oysters freshly eaton, the shells I toss out with the tide.
This poem has not been translated into any other language yet.
I would like to translate this poem