Whack blazing orb-sun, rolling fire,
Lose at croquet to Gramps,
The champ of champs who sent dark down and out away from town.
Toward other years and hours
When high lawn brown and sunk to seed knew weed for flowers.
The games went on till I was ten.
Death, back again, brought grimmer tools
And played Gramps by some older, stricter rules and won.
In mid-June’s bright-noon sun
The croquet stopped in full mid-scene.
We buried old man, mallets, orbs, and hoops in that high green.
That’s years ago.
We rarely visit now in attic meadows where you’d need a plow
To find his treasuring of bones
Or make a measuring of where the ancient joys
Still play themselves on air
For boys.
I only know on days like these
I hear his rushing run above the trees
Where his ghost tells me what life means
From attic where the meadow greens.
Abandon in Place (#ulink_d10fd500-2d0d-5f3d-ac4e-745dedad7766)
Three elegies written on visiting the deserted rocket pads at Cape Canaveral
1
Abandon in Place.
No Further Maintenance Authorized.
Abandon. Turn away your face.
No more the mad high wanderings of thought
You once surmised. Let be!
Wipe out the stars. Put out the skies.
What lived as center to our souls
Now dies—so what?—now dies.
What once as arrow to our thoughts
Which target-ran in blood-fast flow
No longer flies.
Cut off the stars. Slam shut the teeming skies.
Abandon in Place.
Burn out your eyes.
2
Where firebirds once
Now daubers caulk the seams;
Where firewings flew
To blueprint young men’s dreams,
Now warbler here and osprey weave their nests
From laces lost from off a spaceman’s tread.
The great hearthplace stands cold,
Its Phoenix dead.
No more from out the coals
Bright salamanders burn and gyre,
Only the bright beasts’ skins and restless bones bed here,