2015 – Index of Poems

A poem is never finished, just abandoned, dixit Mallarmé or Valéry or one of those fancy French poets. Yet there are degrees of unfinishedness, a quality the fatal press of time is on the side of.

Here is a list of links to the twenty-four poems I “abandoned” in 2015, finishing them more than they could have been finished twenty or even ten years ago when there was more time left to go back to scavenge and pick bones, to rewrite and polish.

Tethering
Shinny
Iris
Beauty Sleep
Stoic Garden
Making Nothing Happen
Insomnia at Forty Below
Shrines
Déjà-vu
Chaparral Sunset
Collations and other Delights
Eggs
Once There Was a Thoroughfare
Enrique’s Viaticum
Oracle
Lozeau’s Azure
Tranströmer Beheld
Tranströmer’s Traces

Quasimodo’s Blessed Brume

Wörgl

Snapshot from Berlin

Zeitverschiebung in Berlin
Un chat parmi les livres

Global Warning

Forks in the Road

When you come to a fork in the road, take it.
– Yogi Berra

A friend called out this text, which I would otherwise never had the chutzpa to write. He was lamenting how little our scattered cohort of Houstonians, he and I and a handful of others, know about each others’ lives over the past fifty years. I’ll tell you my story, he emailed, if you tell me yours. He did not set out the theme I settled on, forks in the road, bifurcations, the sequence of conscious decisions and choices I made  as I advanced through the murk, the fog of life. The casuistical angle I imposed on this writing assignment, my autobiographical pact with any readers it might have, does fit the innocent state of our cohort’s hive mind as we left high school and went out separately into the wide world under the illusion we decide anything in life. 

*

In April, 1963, I made a decision that would shape the rest of my life. I had managed to persuade Dad to let me attend McGill University in Montreal. Paris, my dream at seventeen, was out of reach, but McGill had accepted me and I had scrounged enough money cutting lawns and painting houses to contribute to the cost, of which tuition, in that day and age, was only a small part. Among the many applications I had sent out, one went to Beloit College, in Wisconsin, a private liberal arts college about which I was far from enthusiastic, measured alongside the exotic appeal of living in any place spelled with a Q, as in Quebec, where they spoke French besides. One afternoon before anyone else was home I collected the mail and found addressed to myself a letter from Beloit offering full tuition and much of the room and board there. I knew Dad would insist I accept this deal and give up on going to McGill, not only because this would cost the family less, but also because Wisconsin, though far way, on the distant side of Illinois, was at least in the US. All I had to do was tear up that letter and the path to Montreal was open. Obviously, I didn’t …

Read on …