‘If I Forget’ by David Banach

If I Forget

If I forget you   thunderstorms remind me   claps
thunder   sheets of warm rain    apple blossoms
plastered on wet sidewalks   the smell of clean
afterwards  if I forget you  there is the richness 
of wine on the palate  coffee spread over tongues
if i forget  the breeze blowing   curtain mornings
before you wake   if I forget  what skin feels
what it feels   I forget  if I forget you  there is
always   the night sky   stars and fireflies  if I
atmosphere  forget  and the air in forests  if
hidden between the trees  in memory    around
bends of rushing rivers  over rocks  if I forget
you  what is remembering  if I ever  there was
your hair and it was my face and if I remember
there is something in this world I will never
                                                                  forget.

David Banach is a queer philosopher and poet in New Hampshire, where he tends chickens, keeps bees, and watches the sky. You can read some of his poetry in Isele Magazine, Gyroscope, Etymology, Ars Sententia, and Amphibian Lit. He is co-editor of Touchstone, from the Poetry Society of New Hampshire.