Range Life

Ricardo Frasso Jaramillo

I have meant so much for you: the desk made of redwood

to house my lover’s sunflowers. A window’s blue translation

of a world outside. I have meant the frame. I have meant

the framed. Meaning, its effort, plaits even

our longing with longing. Even our regret

with regret, in pink gold. As for me? I operate with the obstinacy

of a lamp. And just the same sense

of intrusion. The same plated light. I have meant so much. As

for me? There is only conjugation and memory. Or to say so

another way: my lover lives two hours north of this poem by car. She fills the mornings

looking for a parcel of white deer. The deer stand still as description. My lover

moves along their sight. In another life, the deer

were carried to Mendocino from Iran. They will die away

any day now, for lack of a stag. Their nature

is muted, without place. But they have meant so much. They have meant

while my lover hunts their grammar from the summer light.

Ricardo Frasso Jaramillo is a writer of poetry and nonfiction. He is pursuing a PhD in creative writing and literature at the University of Southern California. He is working on his first nonfiction book, the incomplete biography of a volcano.
Originally published:
December 10, 2024

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