It never ended. It crept slightly
behind, but kept in step. On bright
days, it remembered how you chose
yellow or yellow orange, and with
the crayon in your stubby fingers,
drew a circle with a tiara, larger
than the moon. And when it rained,
you made a hundred slanting lines;
they fell like pins from the sky.
No one really got stung or died but
they made an outline of a roof
and walls and somewhere a door.
Winter Nights
I dream of miles of loamy soil
and potatoes in their winter beds,
their eyes still sealed quite shut.
Crows pick through stones for seeds
and nuts. I know sometimes they tear
small animals furtive in the grass,
while in our houses we dunk chunks
of bread in hot soup. Impartial,
stars leak their shine upon us all.
What luck to feel the thumb of sleep
on our lids, the cold a mantle
flung across every form.
Life Cycle
In front, towering
above the sidewalk edge
and the strip of soil
that all refer to as
city property— two pines
where night herons nest
For compost, for return
to the soil; nutrients
for the fruit tree,
says her daughter
regarding the backyard
unraked for months
With today's wind,
a rain of pine needles
unloosed from every
branch. Tomorrow,
armies of leaf blowers
down the street
Overheard
I hear her the first time before I turn
the corner, walking through the refrigerated
section and shelves still stacked with butter
blocks, cardboard boxes of eggs, seasonal
peppermint- and mocha-flavored creamers.
Leave me alone, no, you leave me alone—
the inflection of anger in her voice somehow
incongruous with the almost languid way she
pushes her cart and considers a bag of frozen
peas. Leave me alone, she repeats into her phone
as she makes the rounds for her grocery items.
Other shoppers keep their distance and avoid
eye contact. When did we not exist in
a time of conflict that didn't trickle down
into the minutiae of our lives? I go in solitude
so as not to drink out of everybody's
cistern wrote Nietzsche, afraid the world
might rob him of his soul. What strikes me
is that she keeps the line open, doesn't
cut off the connection, then put her phone
on silent. Not a big anger, perhaps—
Its audible tip, just enough to pierce the air
toward a listening. Just enough so the curious
soul leans a little way out of its bunker.
Greater and Greater Things
Like a tent, like a tarpaulin,
like the roof that held each
thing in. Across my belly though
fainter now, brown marks
that stretched my skin from
inside, each time my womb grew
to house a child. Let everything
happen to you, said Rilke—
and I, a kind of vessel life
will fill and burst and fill
again, if it doesn't defeat
me. I thought it was my duty
not to break this cycle.
But really, not to break.
Dusk, December
Almost the longest night.
Before real darkness arrives,
travelers set out.
*
Some leave, some arrive.
Flaggers waving lit-up wands
before the train station.
*
For a few moments,
the silhouettes of trees pressed
against the sky's burning throat.
*
Domestic vs. extravagant
space: a parade of placid geese
not yet leaning into the wind.
The Noble Plan
"Make no little plans."
~ attributed to Daniel H. Burnham
Like most everything else, it began
as a kind of dream. But grand, both
in scale and purpose. Each instance
toward the manifestation of the dream
became practice, a testing of principles
first laid out on drafting paper, to bring
a sense of imperial order to the new colony
in the East. Outward from the core of government
and the hub for commerce, a network of radiating
grids laid upon the wilderness. Here, the air
was bracing and fragranced with pine: a tonic
for those languishing in the provinces'
tropical heat and malarial fevers. After
the roads, a sanatorium was built on a hill:
as charming as any in Simla or the Swiss alps,
promising rest and recovery for the tubercular;
fresh food and sunlight. A City Beautiful,
whose monuments and buildings were scaffolds
for ideals of civic and moral virtue— whose site,
cleansed of unsightly elements, would support survival,
beckon trade, arrange functions for urban refinement and
aesthetics. An eye for immediate defense and a long future.
marbled
flame-colored and obsidian spokes, trapped in marble orbs—
children flick these into a circle, serious but at play.
to be ground-level, eye-level, and sense the tremble
of what you can't see beneath the only surface
you know: echos of passing traffic, daily clamor
from rushing to or from some important purpose.
describe this strange vessel which we inhabit,
our feet rushing to or from some important purpose.
you know the echoes of passing traffic, daily clamor
of what you can't even see beneath the only surface.
meet it ground-level, eye-level, sense the tremble
as childen flick globes into a circle, serious but at play.
flame-colored and obsidian spokes, trapped in marble orbs—
Apnea
A high pile of pillows in bed, tufted
mattresses, double-lined quilts. Side
sleepers, face-down sleepers, flat-on-
the-back sleepers chasing the elusive
dream of sleep. But we lose count: sheep
show no signs of quitting their high jump
marathons. The moon keeps training
its too bright spotlight through
the window. Is it that we've grown
too soft, too dependent on the idea
of sinking as release? In one museum
alcove, shelves of wooden and porcelain
takamakura, curved to cradle the neck and
head of the sleeper in such a way as to
provide both a cooling effect and preserve
elaborate hairstyles. Perhaps they were on
to something, all those geishas and others
who lay on a mat and rested their heads
on these pillows, even while entertaining
the suitor that slid into the chamber at night,
having first slipped a poem of supplication
into the hands of a lady-in-waiting. Soft
light from the moon filters through screens
as though it did not have an iron core
and a silicate mantle. When I purchase
a sobakawa or pillow filled with buckwheat
hulls, I'm thinking only of how tilting
the chin upwards lifts the tongue away from
the back of the throat, straightening the airway
to better aid the flow of air into the lungs.
Breathlessness can be involuntary; can
also be the climax of heightened emotion.
Losers, Finders
What you lose that someone else finds:
a note slipped into a fold in the cloth
of time; another that slipped your mind.
Not the first time you feel as if blind,
flightless as a domesticated silk moth.
But what you lose, someone else finds—
Luck had nothing to do with your state of mind.
Gravity pick machine, numbered balls in the broth
of time. One after another they slip in your mind.
In thrift store bins, jumbles of left-behinds.
Atlases, maps; mismatched crystal, dish cloths.
What you lost that someone else finds
one bleak day, rummaging idly only to find
luck that flew out of your hands. It sprang forth
out of time that for a moment slipped your mind.
One day, will you catch up to find
it accidentally broken, changed in worth?
What you lose that someone else finds
at another time slips into your mind.

