L.B. (1955-1979)- Brian Culhane
Of that year I remember the soft gauzy
Whitish lump of goat cheese going bad
Like some alchemical disaster turning day
To lead; the Cretan sun so much Minoan
Bull-leapers' somersaulting glory; and you
Looking down the long sluice of months
Toward the metonymy of hospital walls,
Gums dyeing your first Greek hours,
Smearing the hope that brought you here
For one last fling at life....Recovering
From the flight, you pondered my room's
Garish poster of Manhattan's skyline,
Epic in black and white. You caught flaws
In its silhouette only a native could,
Seated before the memory of all you were.
What height had you risked, Lloyd, to come
From the bedridden gloom of Astoria, Queens,
Just to face anachronistic splendor?—you
Whose marrow I'd soon sift through fingers
On a hillside far from any possible future:
Snow's soot on a Catskill lake, after our
Palms patted the silvered seam of earth down.
via poets.org
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