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Notes


February 14, 2026

E. E. Cummings - “[up into the silence the green]”

Honestly, if you have time to read this blurb, you have time to read the poem. Read the poem. —Anika Hatzius



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Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra — Benjamin Zander, Conductor. Sunday May 3, 7:00 PM, Symphony Hall, Boston.

From the Archives


Poetry Summer 2016


I  have  been  fumbling  around  for  a  golden  ring



     polishing  a  golden  ring



*WH*ispers  :  there  will  be  a  murder  in  the  library



but



*there  is  something*,  maybe  a  silk  scarf



      maybe  a  red­-gel'd  footlight



maybe  a  golden  house



      Its  thatch  golden



     Its  wings  nesting



      Its  breath  baby  and  gentlefolk



       Its  inhabitant  skeletal



but  there  is  something            I  don't  know



   light  is  wild  and  cellular



  life  is  spiral  and  godlike



  I  never  had  a  sister



* What  is  it? *



     not the  murder  everyone  is



not    the  way  my  toes  sink  into  the  earth  like  they  were  rehearsing



for  something                      that  there  is  something



*  have  you  made  me  a  nameday  card? *



     Am  I  breathing  lace?   ice?



Porcelain  image  of  a  dear  old  bear



 but  there  is  something  /  but  there  is  something



  maybe just *gone *



*and  a  little  slant *



   porcelain  sister



    make  a  terrible  breathing  through  your  scarf



    it  is  to  make  a  golden  ring  bright  again



    someday  I  will  wander  up  and  down  the  bare  hill  wailing



  someday  the  difference  in  our  borrows  will  revolt



       cold  clouds  that  sweep  through  here



       don't  know  how  much  we  want  to  make  our  lives  right



Features Winter 2015 - Possession


The Widow



 



Snow is a notorious memory stimulator. Last Saturday, when we experienced what felt like winter weather for the first time in a long time, I was having dinner with a gay female friend who works mostly in Los Angeles. We were just catching up, and had yet to order, when my friend received a text from a woman friend, also gay, in Los Angeles. Whitney Houston was dead. There was nothing to say. We looked out the restaurant window, and the snow began to fall. So did the memories, not in droves, but in flakes. Whitney Houston’s alternately powerful and bland resonance for us was not inseparable from our queerness. Indeed, the gorgeous star who had been circumspect about her personal life until she married the already played out but seemingly indomitable teen performer, Bobby Brown, in 1992, was less the author of a touchingly open, gospel-trained voice trying to find meaning in frequently meaningless lyrics, than the beloved friend of a woman named Robyn Crawford, who had been Houston’s closest companion since the singer was sixteen years old. (Crawford was also Houston’s longtime executive assistant.) 

 

In the early 1980s, one sometimes saw Crawford in those places where women of color then gathered—the Duchess on Seventh Avenue South, say, or the Cubby Hole. In those small, self-protective-by-necessity worlds, everyone knew what everyone else did, and with whom, and Crawford was often spoken of in the same breath as the lovely Houston, who had modeled for Essence, and was the daughter of Cissy Houston, herself the cousin of Dionne Warwick. That was all we knew. But as Houston’s career overwhelmed her personality—every significant pop star suffers this fate; often they don’t live long enough to reverse the order—she was still “our” Whitney down there, near Christopher Street, in the West Village: a perforce closeted superstar who had to make a living because she knew gay didn’t pay. 

 

This was familiar to us, particularly when it came to those black female performers, ranging from Bessie Smith to Ethel Waters to Billie Holiday, who skipped over the gay parts of themselves, let alone their milieu, in order to be someone’s idea of femininity, but whose? Whitney Houston always looked like a “femme”: coiffed and sleek, a Jersey girl who could be tough, but she had an even butcher personal assistant who could deal, if it came to that. Houston grew up musically and otherwise in a black Baptist church, where sin hangs heavy in the air, and on the heart, and queerness is the last thing an intolerant population cleaving to Jesus and “correctness” wants to deal with. To be queer is to question if not sully black conservatism, with its rather complicated relationship to heterosexuality as the paradigm of “real” love, while homosexuality is viewed as a white-bred or “European” perversion. And black conservatism shuts its eyes to uncategorizable flowers. That Houston was able to walk in that field as long as she did is a testament to her strength in her difference. 

 

But the pop world is just as conventional as the black universe Houston grew up in; in both, appearances are considered deep because the world responds to the shallow. As Houston’s fame increased, and she was sanctified by marriage, she drove a wedge between the world she and Crawford inhabited together, becoming a martyr to heterosexuality. (At one point it was said that Houston would appear in a remake of A Star is Born, co-starring Bobby Brown. How much would the film have meant if it were about a female superstar who came out about her gay past without offing herself?) Still, Crawford, and what she symbolized, would not leave Houston alone. In 2002, Diane Sawyer interviewed the singer and her then husband in their Atlanta home. Sawyer asked about Crawford, and Whitney, looking double-crossed and angry, said to the camera, and presumably Crawford: “And I love ya. Get over it.” It’s interesting that Houston thought of the camera eye—her most consistent companion for decades before her death, and now forever—was Crawford, her no doubt most steadying love, and honest influence.



 



James Merrill



 



He was the first living poet I knew of who wove his queerness into the poem instead of making it the subject. The world was larger than whom he loved, and he showed it by writing about a world we could not see. His masterpiece, “The Changing Light at Sandover,” showed me what life was like on the other side of so-called reality. He lived in a sphere I was familiar with—the spirit world—but I had never known it effected others as it effected the obeah woman, dream book writers, and numbers runners, of my youth. And if he could do that, then it was our job—the young writer’s job—to “persevere,” a word he uses in this poem. Also, how could one limit one’s writing to flat facts? The soul was not a fact. It moved, changed shape, became something else. Once, sitting in Indochine with the photographer Darryl Turner many many years ago or just a moment ago, I saw James Merrill, dressed as one would imagine a poet would—in something lavender, or blue. Darryl encouraged me to tell JM how much I loved him, and to get his autograph, you never knew. I didn’t. I was crippled by my humility, and writerly insecurity, too, which can be a kind of arrogance: Why was I not him? How could one achieve that on one’s own? He had done it all. Months later James Merrill died of AIDS, and, with him, the fantasy that I would thank him after I had become more myself. I have since become—I hope—more myself, but I have yet to finish thanking him, and, so, here we are.



 



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