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Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Yesterday was a summer day--hot but still pleasant in the shade and in the house, a bit stuffy for sleeping but nothing a fan couldn't handle. Shortly the wretchedness is supposed to kick in--temperatures in the 90s today and tomorrow--yet for the moment the air through the open windows is cool on my bare shoulders, and a warm coffee cup is comforting in my hands.

Yesterday I took a long walk, without ankle consequences, and I hope to do that again today, before the heat invades. Mid-morning the arborist stopped by and had unexpectedly good things to say about our maple situation, which raised my spirits considerably. She admired their strong crowns, their position as a grove, their interwoven root systems, all of which gives them strength in storms. She showed me that the hole in a trunk was slowly healing itself, and she had a non-brutal solution to saving a potentially weakened fork. She admired my healthy ash tree, and I felt happy to be talking to such a calm and affectionate tree person.

Otherwise, it was a quiet day. I worked on a poem revision, and I worked on a friend's poetry manuscript, and I hand-washed a batch of hats and scarves and gloves, and I went to the grocery store, and I finished the Capote novel, and I started a Joyce Carol Oates novel that I don't much like so far, and I made chicken salad and summer rolls, and then T and I ate dinner outside in the gloaming, under our beautiful massive trees.

This morning I woke to find that I've got a poem out in Vox Populi . . . another in a series that borrows titles from famous works of literature and then uses them entirely differently. This one, "The Way We Live Now," is from a Trollope novel.

***

And godspeed, Willie Mays.



2 comments:

  1. another beautifully constructed and ultimately devastating poem . . .

    ReplyDelete
  2. I commented under the poem, but I'd like to tell you (almost) personally: I feel that poem so deeply, it almost made me cry. It opens up the contemplation about boundaries in relationships. alongside the pain of the situation.

    Wow.

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for responding. I'll post your comment soon, as long as you're not a troll.