2006-11-24

I am thankful for laundry and dishes
for coffee and hookah and losing monopoly (twice)
for stars in the clear wee hours after long days of rain
for midnight text messages
and staying up all night just to watch the sun rise
So autumn comes to an end with these few wet sad stains
Suck to the landscape,
December dark
Running its hands through the lank hair of late afternoon,
Little tongues of the rain holding forth
under the eaves,
Such wash, such watery words…

So autumn comes to this end,
And winter’s vocabulary, downsized and distanced,
Drop by drop
Captures the conversation with its monosyllabic gutturals
And tin music,
gravelly consonants, scratched vowels.

Soon the camel drivers will light their fires, soon the stars
Will start on their brief dip down from the back of heaven,
Down to the desert’s dispensation
And night reaches, the gall and first birth,
The second only one word from now,
one word and its death from right now.

Meanwhile, in Charlottesville, the half moon
Hums like a Hottentot
high over Monticello,
Clouds dishevel and rag out,
The alphabet of our discontent
Keeps on with its lettering,
gold on the black walls of our hearts

-- Charles Wright
"Christmas East of the Blue Ridge"

...

Such a joy to read aloud.

2006-11-22

today I give thanks

for long baths, cold nights, and my cats.

Charlie thinks he wants in

Tomorrow, New York City.

Happy Thanksgiving!

.

2006-11-21

He did not come to visit her in New York, that winter, even though he was only a night's journey away. They did not write to each other; they had never done it. But she knew that he would come back to the country for one summer month.