Both deceased, I write in a form that asks me to certify who I am by naming my parents. I do also write their names: old-fashioned names I don't always hear anymore. He was born in 1913, when stainless steel and the zipper were invented, though people still rode around in carriages— which made the cities smell like horseshit. She was born in 1933, the month a ringleted, tap- dancing five-year-old was signed to a Hollywood studio contract, and on the very day the radio was first patented. Between them, two whole decades. I know the story of how they first met, which like most other stories they told seemed unreal and extravagant, but never fiction. Like them, I have what my dentist calls a small mouth, making a history of teeth as closely packed as the over- lapping stones leading to Machu Picchu. I have a wire brace behind my lower central incisors, to correct the gap after one of the lateral incisors was extracted. When my father died in the aftermath of an earthquake, his cooling body lay on their bed for two days until we could find a coffin. When my mother died, her caregivers washed and dressed her, and then her body went straight to the crematorium. The new year doesn't feel new anymore, until the lunar new year. Already, there are festive cakes in red and gold tins at the Asian groceries. This is supposed to be the Year of the Dragon, a year predicted to bring change, opportunity, and challenge. I don't remember who said predictions are hard to make, especially about the future.
Old salt
This morning Sir W. Batten, the Comptroller and I to Westminster-hall, to the Commissioners for paying off the Army and Navy, where the Duke of Albemarle was; and we sat with our hats on, and did discourse about paying off the ships and do find that they do intend to undertake it without our help; and we are glad of it, for it is a work that will much displease the poor seamen, and so we are glad to have no hand in it.
From thence to the Exchequer, and took 200l. and carried it home, and so to the office till night, and then to see Sir W. Pen, whither came my Lady Batten and her daughter, and then I sent for my wife, and so we sat talking till it was late. So home to supper and then to bed, having eat no dinner to-day.
It is strange what weather we have had all this winter; no cold at all; but the ways are dusty, and the flyes fly up and down, and the rose-bushes are full of leaves, such a time of the year as was never known in this world before here. This day many more of the Fifth Monarchy men were hanged.
I miss the navy
where we sat
with our hats on
under the sea
glad to have the night
and no strange weather
winter dust and flies
and the rose-bush
full of leaves
a time of year
never known
in this world before
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 21 January 1660/61.
Madrigal with Cicada Chorus
Picture the emergence of a trillion zinging bodies, up through damp earth after long seasons of fumbling, seventeen years each cycle. Abundance and ambition, their bugle cries the signal of readiness to mate. XIII and XIX (largest of all broods) shed their carapace in the process of growing adult bodies and wings. They’re vulnerable in between states, but doggedly tuned to the frequencies of fate. Before you can say vacation, they’ll mate, lay eggs, then die— A story just as exquisite as any long-drawn out romantic tragedy. Carpe diem, use it or lose it; though really, we lose it all at the end. Frenzy of desire in the face of extinction; whirlwind courtship, then off to the Chapel of Love in Vegas. Red-eyed and glossy- veined, just days later you come across discarded suits, torn bouquets of fishnet stockings, casino tokens. Hafiz said, Even though the drunkenness of love has ruined me, my being’s built upon those ruins for eternity. Icing spackles the slice of cake in the freezer—quaint custom we have for marking anniversaries. By July, the escalated rasp of tymbals in the trees gradually peters out. Soon it’s time to harvest radish, potatoes, and kabocha before wintering. Migrating flocks raise their muted oboes as they disappear from view, and the cycles of labor and love begin anew. Bank fires, shelter the coals. Nesting with yourself means forbearance, the tempering of melismas.
Body of Christ
(Lord’s day). To Church in the morning. Dined at home. My wife and I to Church in the afternoon, and that being done we went to see my uncle and aunt Wight. There I left my wife and came back, and sat with Sir W. Pen, who is not yet well again. Thence back again to my wife and supped there, and were very merry and so home, and after prayers to write down my journall for the last five days, and so to bed.
church in the morning
church in the afternoon
do we seem clean
I am a well
in every merry prayer
for the sand
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Sunday 20 January 1660/61.
Complex Geometries
Relevance is a question that bubbles up now and again. In an elevator packed with people, I sometimes wonder if they would read me; if my particulars resonate enough for them to remember. The doors close and open. At a party, I linger near the table of cocktail shrimp and dip, refill my plate, listen to revealing conversations around me. I try to do what our hosts say as they prowl the room—Enjoy! How to find space amid spheres of ever-shifting fractals, and how I want to believe no branch or starry bifurcation could ever be merely identical to the next.
Sled run
To the Comptroller’s, and with him by coach to White Hall; in our way meeting Venner and Pritchard upon a sledge, who with two more Fifth Monarchy men were hanged to-day, and the two first drawn and quartered. Where we walked up and down, and at last found Sir G. Carteret, whom I had not seen a great while, and did discourse with him about our assisting the Commissioners in paying off the Fleet, which we think to decline. Here the Treasurer did tell me that he did suspect Thos. Hater to be an informer of them in this work, which we do take to be a diminution of us, which do trouble me, and I do intend to find out the truth.
Hence to my Lady, who told me how Mr. Hetley is dead of the small-pox going to Portsmouth with my Lord. My Lady went forth to dinner to her father’s, and so I went to the Leg in King Street and had a rabbit for myself and my Will, and after dinner I sent him home and myself went to the Theatre, where I saw “The Lost Lady,” which do not please me much. Here I was troubled to be seen by four of our office clerks, which sat in the half-crown box and I in the 1s. 6d.
From thence by link, and bought two mouse traps of Thomas Pepys, the Turner, and so went and drank a cup of ale with him, and so home and wrote by post to Portsmouth to my Lord and so to bed.
white way
on a sled
down as fleet
as my rabbit self
in a heat
not seen at home
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Saturday 19 January 1660/61.
Poem Which Wants to Banish Encroaching Cold
The sounds of dishes washed in the sink, the smell of coffee brewing.
In the dining room, last night I talked with an old friend on Zoom—
my former college Philosophy teacher, now approaching his eighth
decade, hair gone grey and sparse but face still youthful. All around,
books and papers spill over shelves and counters. Winter shadows
frost the window panes. He used to study beads among highland
tribes: smoky agates, striped jasper, cloudy carnelian—heirlooms
passed down in families, until dire straits forced their sale. Likewise,
I've wished to leave meaningful objects with those I love. I have a pair
of Kalinga earrings, discs of mother-of-pearl; a beaded T'boli blouse,
a few bits of abaca fabric embroidered by hand. Beside the kitchen clock,
a carved granary god with sooty countenance sits, unaware that the heat
in our house has gone out. Winter without, wintry within. We feel it in our
bones, hunting for some bright amulet whose light won't go out.
(for Benjie Abellera)
Addict
The Captains went with me to the post-house about 9 o’clock, and after a morning draft I took horse and guide for London; and through some rain, and a great wind in my face, I got to London at eleven o’clock. At home found all well, but the monkey loose, which did anger me, and so I did strike her till she was almost dead, that they might make her fast again, which did still trouble me more. In the afternoon we met at the office and sat till night, and then I to see my father who I found well, and took him to Standing’s to drink a cup of ale. He told me my aunt at Brampton is yet alive and my mother well there. In comes Will Joyce to us drunk, and in a talking vapouring humour of his state, and I know not what, which did vex me cruelly. After him Mr. Hollier had learned at my father’s that I was here (where I had appointed to meet him) and so he did give me some things to take for prevention. Will Joyce not letting us talk as I would I left my father and him and took Mr. Hollier to the Greyhound, where he did advise me above all things, both as to the stone and the decay of my memory (of which I now complain to him), to avoid drinking often, which I am resolved, if I can, to leave off.
Hence home, and took home with me from the bookseller’s Ogilby’s Aesop, which he had bound for me, and indeed I am very much pleased with the book.
Home and to bed.
rain in my face
at the dead of night
I see a standing stone
decay into drink
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Friday 18 January 1660/61.
January Blues

shadows on the snow
stretched out as if in prayer
the sound made by a spring
as ice smothers it
news that breaks and breaks
on slow snowshoes left right
here the urgent leaps
of a white-footed mouse
there a coyote pair
taking turns breaking trail
squirrels in heat
their labyrinthine urges
skeletal feathers of frost
where a vole is breathing

all just uphill from the interstate
a thing shown on maps
and a town in the mountains
taken over by mountains of snow
in every parking lot
another white peak
the pigeons rise
become a flock of rock doves
revolving in the blue
like a stuck tire

Heart Paper Ghazal
I can't remember the name of the girl in high school who tried
to convince us to smoke by saying "It's just like inhaling paper."
After school, we'd walk to Session Road and try to get into Gingerbread
Folkhouse, where college kids drank beer and passed around rolling papers.
A group would sit around in their denim bell-bottoms, strumming
guitars, puffing smoke rings, writing editorials for the newspaper.
We were all young and green, naive to the world. Some pretended
to turn up their noses at fashion magazines with glossy paper.
Apparently one could not be trusted to be loyal to the cause if one
harbored bourgeois aspirations: heavy stock stationery paper,
bread and cheese; art, movies, poetry that cared about the strength
and beauty of language besides the violence we read about in the papers.
These days, no one is spared, no one set apart from the cruelties of human
hate. I try to keep my heart open despite heartrending news in the papers.

