What we took from the garden
was love, for love is knowledge
and the knowledge of love
is a bitter seed in the belly of a bird.
Expelled over new lands
the seed falls as love into the soil,
casts out slender roots to grow
and seed and grow again,
carried further and further
from the garden
in unending chains of fruiting trees.
The trees hold the garden as memory
in a lover’s embrace, as the sun
is sucked by leaves, consumed
in adoration and exchange.
And age becomes knowledge
becomes love as their trunks swell
over time into rings, and each ring
binds us to the garden because
what we took from the garden
was love, and love was the garden
and it is the garden that keeps us
breathing each other in
here in the cold land beyond its gates
as it pumps through our hearts
like blood.