Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 14, 2025

AUBADE IN OCTOBER

 


I've missed these slow-moving autumn days,
the gray and muted morning easing
imperceptibly into afternoon, the hours,
neither short nor long, renegotiating their borders
and sovereignty among the chill mist of river,
threads of woodsmoke without source,
dogs nosing bits of earth suddenly remembered.
I've missed them in the way that I miss you,
and I miss you in ways I do not yet understand;
you who exist to me now only in the telling,
and in the silence between speech, grown longer
with age, not with hesitation but knowing.
I've missed trying to write it all down,
the familiarity of leaving for the sake of leaving,
when everywhere is suddenly north, the steady work
of window gazing, the very luxury of failing.
I've missed the leaves flaming up in their descent,
becoming as open as books, their veiny spines
withered and cracking, each life a secret
unto itself, each history whispered in passing,
each an ending, and none of them final.


Thursday, May 29, 2025

AUTHOR PHOTO

 


It was the way he held the temple tip of his eyeglasses gently against his lips, pinched and not quite smiling, as if he were about to nibble them, lost somewhere in thought, or at least within the bright confusion that sometimes leads to it. It was the faux-shabbiness of the shelf behind him, filled with well-placed books for our consideration, the loosely-tied silk scarf, and the sporty blazer of no discernable color. But mostly, it was the hands -- hands that looked as though they had never lifted anything heavier than a pen and notebook, never shoveled snow or horseshit, or shingled a roof in ninety-five degree heat, never picked cotton or plucked metal shavings from them after a double shift on the assembly line. They looked, to my eye, as though they had been preserved under museum glass for this moment alone, positioned now in some uncommitted form of prayer, one index finger folded inward toward himself, as if we had somehow missed him, as if he were afraid of receding back into the silence of the page.

Popular Poems