Enjoy a Poem Inspired by Emien Etting’s “Flying Fruit”

Food is a basic human need. In our Food for Thought series, James Beard Award–winning journalist, scholar, and writer Cynthia Greenlee hosts a gathering of historians, food journalists, poets, chefs, and farmers and invites them to riff on food-related works of art in our permanent collection.
Flying Fruit
After the print by Emien Etting
Aimee Nezhukumatathil
Of all the citrus flavors in my amusement park mouth,
of course it’s the lemon that leaps farthest. It makes my face
squinch and squint even when I know what’s coming. Behind
that, the bite of an orange surges such a surf-line, I half expect
to see a Hawaii Five-0 wave crush just behind my tongue. After
that comes the lime, and it’s not hard to remember our first kiss—
the zest and rest I finally felt with you. The rind is twisted
and torn into my glass of gin (and yours too) and soon we
are laughing too loud in the middle of the afternoon. Even if
we shuffle home, arm in arm, I promise to make moments
like these feel like flying. We’re winners. We get to bring the goldfish
in a bowl home. We get to snack on funnel cakes and a sackful
of kettle corn. At home I’ll serve us up a dish with a dollop
of lime pickle on the edge of our plate. Ring the bell. I will bring
the heat, the heart—you’ll never want to get off this carousel.
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