Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

UNLIMITED

The American Scholar

FOUR POEMS

My Children’s Inheritance

A fancy for high green hills by a sea, baggy spaces
in the day, a knack for gunpowder thinking,
a library humming like a swarm of gnats;

the intrigue of a woman with a pitch-perfect mind,
blinking eyes whose silence is ancient and naked,
a grave that is not a grave but a ruin to visit in middle age;

a chifforobe of half-empty cologneand dried flowers more dignified in death, bothevidence that I once cherished bouquets and timelessness;

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The American Scholar

The American Scholar23 min read
Thoreau's Pencils
AUGUSTINE SEDGEWICK is the author of Coffeeland: One Man's Dark Empire and the Making of Our Favorite Drug, winner of the 2022 Cherasco Prize, and the forthcoming Fatherhood: A History of Love and Power. When Henry Thoreau was a boy, he asked his mot
The American Scholar23 min readMusic
Anchoring Shards of Memory
JOSEPH HOROWITZ is the author of 13 books exploring the American musical experience. His Naxos documentary €lms include Charles Ives’ America. As director of the NEH-funded “Music Unwound” consortium, he has initiated Ives sesquicentennial celebratio
The American Scholar8 min read
Adventures With Jean
I lived in New York City when it was more violent and dangerous than it is now. Needle Park was still a place where people were killed and women were raped, and the Lower East Side was a place where you wanted to be careful. Mobsters shot each other

Related Books & Audiobooks