poetry


Fiorella de Maria
Grantchester Meadows


Fiorella de Maria
Widow's Walk


Susan St. Martin
the EPA drained


Peter Ascik
The Infinite Jest


R.S. Mitchell
Reading Pascal at Mint Springs


Robert MacArthur
Scattered Thundershowers this Afternoon


Robert MacArthur
Autumn Interrupts


Robert MacArthur
The Cheshire Cat


Kate Bluett
Incarnation


Michael Miller
To a Young Tenor Singing Schubert


James Watson
Genesseret


Jason Baguia
Oracle near Restful Waters


Joseph O'Brien
San Diego Poem: Palm Sunday


Fiorella de Maria
Sirocco


Rose Polchowne
Consummatum Est


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To A Young Tenor Singing Schubert
The songs are charming, and you wear them well.
Your fine interpretation is, in truth,
The fresh, resilient sympathy of youth:
Your surplus sentiment is half your skill.

Your manner and your voice betoken Spring;
Your windswept heart is ruled by Winter, though,
Where notes leave footprints in the powdery snow
Which vanish with the next air that you sing.

What will you do when sentiment grows dear,
The road turns brown, the weather—moist and warm?
Where will you find the courage to perform
Down to the quick? What will your audience hear?

A fenced-in meadow where the cattle graze,
Or ivy cuttings in a green-glass vase?

--Michael Miller

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Michael Miller is a professional translator and freelance writer for the Catholic press. He holds degrees from Oberlin College and from the Yale Graduate School.