Palm Springs

We drink Fernet by ironic sculptures
under misters that make our bangs damp.

It’s our anniversary, 
though that time feels faint.

We are searching for a place
to escape his diagnosis,

laws against gay marriage,
our leaky, flat roof.

Every Memorial Day 
and Labor Day, we go to the desert.

Sometimes also the Fourth 
of July.

Palm Springs rewinds things.
We almost buy that mid-century chair

proud of our rule that love for it 
needs to be immediate.

At the Parker, a guy with a calf tattoo 
brings drinks. 

You can ask for anything here.
We toast to another year without cancer.

After dinner, we wander the hotel hedge maze,
nowhere to go that late but home.

Credit

Copyright © 2023 by Christian Gullette. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on March 17, 2023, by the Academy of American Poets.

About this Poem

“When people think of Palm Springs it is often as a place for vacation, pools, and pleasure, and those inviting experiences certainly inform this poem. But I am also interested in the desert as a place of survival. The poem reflects my interests in California landscapes and the myths of promised lands, as well as the ways grief, eroticism, ecological concerns, and intimacy wrestle not only with the contingencies of life and place, but with beauty especially.”
—Christian Gullette