Poetry

  • History of the Horsemen

    A horseman was found horseless on the side of the road. We asked afterhis horse, but he had no recollection, of a horse or of his having been ahorseman. And so how were we so sure? How did we know this was aman who lacked the very thing that defined him? We knew because weourselves…

  • A Life in the Theater

    After her husband died she sent herself to other worldsBelfast and Paris and some other ununited states—to bein places—as she put it—that felt as strange as the strangenessof the other earth under the one we dream we are standing on. She took pictures of the beyond and sent them over.She wrote some things but not…

  • Mermaid Parade

    You didn’t want to ride bikes to Coney Island,so I went by myself, rode the straight shotof Bedford past Prospect Park, past BrooklynCollege, until I hit the waters of Sheepshead Bay,then turned right and rode toward the bungee-jumpride I could see hot pink against blue sky.A new high rise. Mermaids danced along Shore Parkwayholding solo…

  • Lacrimae rerum

    tears for things As for empathy, it was breakfastthat taught me first the feelings      of objects. Each wet Cheerio floated there despairing,it seemed, to be—bare      raft—wrenched like that from its family. Foodwas just the beginning. I pitied      the drooping head of the desk lamp, the light bulb its burning out. I endowedwith the pathos of…

  • That Golden Hour

    An hour before the time to quit, he saton the wall that was lying on the floor, that we had been framingand I still working around,my hammer’s momentum fading. And tired myself, I sat next to himas he untied his shoe, undid
the double-knotted bow, then pulled slack into the lacingthrough each eye, one after another….

  • Small Streets

    for Yasi I too love small streets—those orphans who don’t want usto make a fuss over thembut are delighted when a strangershows up and walks through,by choice or chance. Big Historyis never there, though the residentsoften display a quiet dignity worthyof long years’ note. Birds alwayshop on the concrete—the scrawnytrees always seem a little nakedeven…

  • Walking City to City

    I have spent most of my life walkingFrom one place to another not in the naturalWorld but the built world of cities sometimesGoing from one to another then zigzaggingAround them street to street walkingEverywhere I went not briskly but saunterWas my pace and my speed resembled the turtle’sOr even the snail or sometimes even the…

  • The Wristwatch

    Time is led by its interrogatorsinto a round room with a domed glass ceiling.Ranged along the wall, strange numerals stand,mossy columns salvaged from some forgotten god’s temple.In the center of the room, on a small table,rest two black hands, cut off at the wrists,frozen in the pose of a pianist’sthe moment before the crescendo.The hands…