PoemTwenty-One Love Poems XVI
Author / PoetAdrienne Rich
TagsConnection, Distance, Intimacy, Love

XVI

Across a city from you, I’m with you,
just as an August night
moony, inlet-warm, seabathed, I watched you sleep,
the scrubbed, sheenless wood of the dressing-table
cluttered with our brushes, books, vials in the moonlight—
or a salt-mist orchard, lying at your side
watching red sunset through the screendoor of the cabin,
G minor Mozart on the tape-recorder,
falling asleep to the music of the sea.
This island of Manhattan is wide enough
for both of us, and narrow:
I can hear your breath tonight, I know how your face
lies upturned, the halflight tracing
your generous, delicate mouth
where grief and laughter sleep together.

Adrienne Rich
Adrienne Rich
16 May 1929 - 27 Mar 2012
Region: North America
Period: Contemporary
Movement: Feminist, Postmodern
Awards: National Book Award, Pulitzer Prize for Poetry

more poems by Adrienne Rich

Poem NameTopic
Twenty-One Love Poems XXIChoice, Identity, Light
Twenty-One Love Poems XXConversation, Love, Reflection
Twenty-One Love Poems XVIIIEstrangement, Love, Miracle
Twenty-One Love Poems XVIIAccident, Forces, Love
Twenty-One Love Poems XVBeach, Circumstances, Failure
Twenty-One Love Poems XIXConnection, Love, Reality
Stepping BackwardConnection, Goodbye, Identity
Snapshots of a Daughter-In-LawAngels, Experience, Memory
Rural ReflectionsExpression, Grass, Intent
Prospective Immigrants Please NoteChoice, Experience, Memory

all poems by Adrienne Rich

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