Today is the centenary of the birth (in Miami, Florida) of Donald Justice, a very fine poet who is still undervalued – indeed, he's barely known on this side of the Pond – but whose works will surely last. Patrick Kurp pays fitting tribute on Anecdotal Evidence. I shall simply post a Justice poem, one of my favourites...
Thinking about the Past
Certain moments will never change, nor stop being—
My mother's face all smiles, all wrinkles soon;
The rock wall building, built, collapsed then, fallen;
Our upright loosening downward slowly out of tune—
All fixed into place now, all rhyming with each other.
That red-haired girl with wide mouth—Eleanor—
Forgotten thirty years—her freckled shoulders, hands.
The breast of Mary Something, freed from a white swimsuit,
Damp, sandy, warm; or Margery's, a small, caught bird—
Darkness they rise from, darkness they sink back toward.
O marvellous early cigarettes! O bitter smoke, Benton...
And Kenny in wartime whites, crisp, cocky,
Time a bow bent with his certain failure.
Dusks, dawns; waves; the ends of songs...
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