You are using an outdated browser.
Please upgrade your browser
and improve your visit to our site.

Memorial Day

Behind the banyan trees, the mansions. Behind the mansions, the
            lagoon—.
In the lagoon, a mooring of sailboats.

Wind in the rigging.
Hull-slap and groan. 

                                                                Where is everybody?

The sound of people playing in their pools—well ..., there
Isn’t any; the streets 

Are empty—, the moon, like a moon
Jelly, beating its slow float in the not- 

Quite-dark. In the gardens of the Moorings Country Club,
The lights have come on, rice paper lanterns on which are 

Printed cherry blossoms. O—this un-
Starred sky. And the smell of the star 

Jasmine, the fleshy, resplendent scent
Of the gardenia. Is this where I say, I

Miss you? Where I say, Father, isn’t there anything
In this evening’s long cortege of bloom, as beautiful 

                                                                      As it used to be?

Like the sound of a ghost ship drifting
Through fog—like a sweet-despicable 

Imitation of mourning—a piteousness of doves is cooing in the
             banyan trees.