Pinyon Publishing
In Passing
In Passing
Couldn't load pickup availability
In "Intervals," he's philosophical: "... 'The farther out we look / the farther back in time we see the stars- / and if, like God, we could look far enough / we'd see the space-born, nebulous / beginnings of creation.'"
In the title poem, "In Passing," he realizes, recovers, and accepts history: "A sandstone bluff above a waterhole / made El Morro National Monument / a well-marked campsite. / Here / 'Ancestral Puebloans, Spanish and American / travelers carved over 2,000 signatures, / dates, messages, and petroglyphs' / before they passed into obscurity. / Daylight deepened their inscriptions."
In "Emily Dickinson," he captures that great poet lovingly in her Amherst garden: "The garden waited. Birds held magic speech / against the haze of still trees, as the throb / of insects dropped into the sanguine reaches / of her heart."
In a poem about his childhood, "In Honolulu, 1947," war becomes the hopefulness of young love, carefully plotted: "You stood shy / and silent also in that half-moon night / outside our eighth-grade canteen and its music, / lured by a speech I'd carefully prepared / and passed on through a friend."
These are fine, poignant poems easy to read quickly but with the depth to encourage our return time and time again.
Share
