Tag: The Adirondack Almanac

  • The Kiss by George Cassidy Payne

    (Inspired by Gustav Klimt)

    The kiss is nectar-filled
    skin wrapped over a corpse.

    It stands still in the mouth like
    a crouching tiger at a motionless
    midday stream.

    The kiss knows that figures are
    keeping watch. As tarantulas scuttle
    underfoot, it cracks apart like stepped on
    craw fish shells.

    Petite. Pink. Long and patient. Stingless
    and vaporizing. The difference between
    waiting and enduring.

    The kiss was never meant to be a hand
    shake or a goodbye. Like a moose, 5,343 feet
    below a canopy of charred balsam, scarfing wild
    shrooms, with instant knowing, The kiss bustles.

    Plunged into the minerals like an ice ax. Breaking them
    open upon a bed of prismatic sands. Submerged in
    asteroids. The kiss. Colliding intentions. Like the wind nudging
    two chimes. Existing together as they must.

    George Cassidy Payne is originally from the Adirondack Mountains of Upstate New York. He now lives and works in the City of Rochester, New York. George is a poet, photographer, essayist, professor of philosophy, and social worker. George’s poetry has been included in a variety of  journals and magazines, including Chronogram Magazine, Allegro Poetry Journal, Mojave Heart, the Red Porch Review, Albany Up the River Poets Journal, Teahouse, The Adirondack Almanac, The Mindful Word, Talker of the Town, Pulsar, Moria Poetry Journal, Ampersand Literary Review, and many others.