In winter, we get inside each other. The erotics of the dark, cold season differ from that of summer
In winter, we get inside each other. The erotics of the dark, cold season differ from that of summer—not the flirty, sundressed frolic, not sultry August sweat above the lip, not tan lines or sand in shoes or voluptuous tulips. It’s a different sort of smolder now. Quilted, clutching, we wolve for one another, ice on the puddles and orange glow from windows against deepest evening blue. In summer: lust and laze, days are loose and lasting. In winter: time tightens, night’s wide open, the hunger says right now.Part Three of my series on the Winter Solstice for the Paris Review. [Paul Cezanne, Leda and the Swan, c. 1882] -- source link
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