All-Weather Country
Monday, November 29, 2010
Bounds
Those behind the wall would have seconded
And seen the bolt strike left, and still not lift
An eyebrow, because whose left anyway?
I portended ends that have not come yet;
Abandoned home in an all-weather country
For the flattening shade of Constancy
Where, above all men, we worship Aengus.
No. I mispoke. Worship is the wrong word
And Aengus does not fit. Keats' sedge knight
With his boggy shield completes this image,
A silver wanderer in ghostly woods:
His recusant hand skims wasting heathers
And drops likewise into shallow, withered streams
For a fish or woman who is not there--
Though the fish recalls that poet king
(Whose rodded harp-string sinks in growing grass),
Skinny and longing in the poet's grasp.
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Sonnet for a Cockateel

Saturday, October 2, 2010
Poem for Reading
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Leveling

Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Sonnet for Staying Friends
When I think of us as something nascent
Or young and unfounded, or newly wrought,
Or virginal (now that’s a funny thought.
Virginal. Young, eager, maybe frightened?
Attempting to find some new untouched spot
And feigning poise or erotic complacence)
I wonder if the text falsifies ends,
Or if we are new hands on some law book.
Wonderfully new. Hands can be drawn or shook
Whenever. And people can let a new
Line be drawn wherever, in sand or soot;
Though that sounds stupid: imagine us years
From now drawing lines in the ground in some
Sandy patch in the middle of everything.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Villanelle: Watchman's Song

New benedictions by which I was blessed
Grew structures and rules, implicit in time,
And counted on fingers, stressed and unstressed.
No ox on the tongue, no sunlight to rest,
No turn of the pages, no thinking sublime,
Just new benedictions; a baby to bless.
Ship’s smoothest wood mocked Leviathan best,
Her coat-foundered floor (one Mariner’s Ryme)
Uncurled my small fingers, stressed and unstressed.
Ein Zeit—a time—Und Geist: a living test,
A lamb bleating sharp at the shearing time,
A father to father; his latter half blessed.
Now I recall my father’s barrel chest,
Vibrations on ear, and rumble-stacked rhyme;
He counted my fingers, stressed and unstressed.
Arching of fable, a glint from the West,
A thunderous march-to and tug-on-the-line
Renews benedictions by which I was blessed:
A count on the fingers, stressed and unstressed.
Monday, April 26, 2010
Villanelle
A kneeling man keels in the shallowbank,
In the fish pond, where the fish always were.
He elbows in for no one left to thank.
Within whose walls and burden due his rank
And memory, to whom should he confer?
A kneeling man keels in the shallowbank.
In the house he can wash inside his tank,
And nothing in to watch or even stir,
He elbows in for no one left to thank,
Beneath Helen’s breast, where skin was wiped blank,
Or in the marshes where never with her,
A kneeling man keels in the shallowbank
His fingertips test the threshold, inside dank
contents of ether, just water to her;
He elbows in for no one left to thank.
Thinking of currents against which his lank
Body could curl – or turn, and not stir,
A kneeling man keels in the shallow bank,
And reaches down for no one left to thank.