The Farce of Falling in Love with the Young Man Cleaning the Gutters

The Farce of Falling in Love

       with the Young Man

      Cleaning the Gutters

His compact shoulders look too small at times

Like swellings on an oak tree’s bark, a bit

Too narrow. They are like the little crimes

Of leprechauns, more like an Irish skit

Than tragedy like Romeo spread out

In love, in bed, the night before his death

In love.  These shoulders, they are more like pout

Than Hamlet’s anger and confusion’s breath

So prolix, prolix as male metaphors

Can make it. Still, these shoulders are as taut

As Tybalt’s sword before its toxic scores

Are taken from him by the lover’s fraught

Destruction.  They are beautiful, each bulge,

Awaiting what a tongue’s kiss can divulge.