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Notes


February 14, 2026

E. E. Cummings - “[up into the silence the green]”

Honestly, if you have time to read this blurb, you have time to read the poem. Read the poem. —Anika Hatzius



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Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra — Benjamin Zander, Conductor. Sunday May 3, 7:00 PM, Symphony Hall, Boston.

From the Archives


Poetry Winter 2012


1On the curt eve of November to make out of patience a new name.Shale-light, long scythes of it,2slicing through the turbid shadow-impressions of failed snow,pauses at certain angles and, inceasing to carve, deepens the engravingsof wind, hoof-prints, the murky aquatintafter-bristle of ferns iced-over andswept into new grooves...3As if justice cannot beserved to principle if the principle alone does not meltunder the surveillance of*force*—skittish, ever-4truant, this autumn wind ever-whetting itself, andthis light transmogrifying itself—a passing bird like a toss of chopped tobacco.And then, the light reconnoitering—5bossed lardy handfuls of itfallen, then cobbled in groups of two or three,among the yew-cones and in the paunchy creaseswhere the sidewalk abandons plot, sagging a little.And that single gob of it—horse-hair grey, crackling likethe fat toe of a god. After the curt melt of6this evening to wake up ina tree, into a grainin the growth in the upper left finger of the smallest branchin the very reddest tree. To sensehandlessness, then the catch-of-flint roil ofstatic—a canopy of hands. To feel my handstighten—lean—then loosen—and thento feel slenderin an unloosened light. How can one batethe tongue then, how can one judge what to savor andwhat to let turn frail andincendiary? And the light? How can one servejustice to a principleif body is one and the lolling limber light anotherthat lacquers it?7The dead have their lightless islandsand we, each new second,use that second to shuck off a secondself. All the while the small moldedbuhl leaves scattermildly, settling in our hair like cut-out lacunas fromsome fluted elemental music, inflaking November-light.I would not want, I think, in thisporcelain-light, to suffer the suddenness ofanother’s skin—to sensea shade as treacle, grey, curried, or white asleaves. There are still8the unraveling sprigs ofmy topcoat to contend with. And thenthe theater tonight.


Features Winter 2012


On the ground rests a slip of paper worth $96. A janitor, mop and cigarette in one hand, kneels down and studies the fine print. CALDER LEG 1: 4, 6, 7; LEG 2: 3.



He stops there. He mops on, smokes on, looks on. Later he returns with a dustpan and wipes up the trash under Seabiscuit’s 1937 MassCap banner.



            Outside, the oval is kept well enough, dragged through and through with a six a.m. tractor and a six a.m. man. The enclosing fence defines pristine as white. In the infield lurks a fountain in its off-season.



            At the nearest betting window, a sign hangs reading “CLOSED.” In the window next to it, a sign reading “CLOSED.”  A third window missing its sign is closed.



            On the wall hangs a painting of a horse standing on a patch of grass. There is no one on the horse, but the length of the grass patch in front of the horse is equal to the length of the grass patch behind the horse.  Behind the painting of the horse is a mural of another horse. There is a man on the horse in the mural, but the painting is on that man.



            A square machine in a hole in the wall prints a slip of paper worth $24. It falls into the hand of a man with a custom-made coat made for someone else in someone else’s era. It will learn if it deserves the ground.



            The man limps out to the track and squints at the finish line. No one has crossed it in three months. Not a single loser. He limps back inside.



            Twelve TV’s in two rows of six flash odds, pools and payouts. POST TIME blinks on the set simulcasting live from Aqueduct. The horses approach the starting gate resolute and in low-definition.



            A cluster forms. All heads turn up, all eyes take in the screen a few feet under heaven. “I know a guy,” the man says. No one mutters an answer. “I know a guy who had a dream about the number five. So he woke up at five and took the fifth train out of the station. There were five people in his car. He shows up at the track, and in the fifth race puts five grand on the five.”



            The race goes off.



            “Horse finishes fifth.”



            2:03:20 later, the race ends. The $24 slip of paper lazily finds the ground, worth nothing.



            The man heads for the machine in the hole in the wall. It does not smell like horses. 



Poetry Winter 2009


**1 / Meeting Burt**



Burt Lancaster and I don’t

have much to die for: love

of the game and the gold

and the girl not as much 



makes simple to say she’s not

beautiful, perpetually

never quite undressed,

dusty and sweaty under

that scarf, her dress, her

face, wide plain, blessed

expanse glistening daily

above breasts long fought



for, Burt and I, too old

now to care about love.





**2 / Losing Burt**



The tropes gather faster when Burt appears,

he’s lost craps and a woman, broke and rebuffed, 

smirking and grumbling that humans make love

face to face, a remark worthy of some score-

settling cowboy in spurs, not you, Burt, your

single regard for time and rock blown rough

in one moment’s furnace of sticks, sweaty, buffed,

refusing objection your fusework near blears

human loss so unsavory

                                               I’m lost, Burt,

can’t tell your face features through the sure

group’s tactics and horses, making calm

ill-advised, more fitting to flail and blurt

guilt in tumid air that soaks these shores

without oceans,

                              Your hand is creased without a palm.





**3 / Replacing Burt (On Seeing a Different Western)**



Burt and I have had a falling out

I say loud, hoping after a reaction,

eyeing with verve and meaning my now

and new loved outlaw, lanky Gary. Faction



different this time, clean-shaven and freshly

married, on the run not from the long

law but the lawless. Blonde-sweet Miss Kelly

headstrong and stupid—seems he’s on the wrong

 

side of her Quaker complaints. He stays to greet

a death mimed by cruel schoolboys. A crime

for their sake. Boys scatter. Streets empty. Smutty heat,

smutty Gary beneath the Marshall sign,



moral and certain, leather and tallow.



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