Sunday, July 13, 2014

White

George Washington powdered his wig
white.  Womens’ hair whitens when they let it
and old men’s too where they still have it. 
Shaving cream and Ivory Soap.  Marshmallows.
Wonder Bread.  Milk.  Whipped cream
on french vanilla ice cream.  At the Museum
of Modern Art: White On White,
Kazimir Malevich, 1918.  Linen sheets
with high thread counts that receive you kindly
after a day in the sun.  Clam shells  
scallop, and oyster shells bleached
to reflection on South beach.

In Edgartown, Dr. Fisher’s house is white
and the captains’ houses on Water Street
and the picket fences around them.  The Old
Whaling Church and other churches, but one
is brick with white trim.  At the tennis court,
white clothes are required, though the balls
are yellow.  Clothes are also required
at the District Court, but no color is specified.

Diners in white, sit at white tables
and wipe their mouths with white napkins. 
In 1967, the Moody Blues sang Knights
In White Satin.  Perhaps women wear
white lingerie and men whitey tighties.  
Ceremonial robes of the Pope and Bedouin.
Queen Victoria was married in white
and western brides after her.  But not
in India or China, where brides wear red
and white is the color of mourning.

The morning sun catches each lighthouse –
Cape Pogue first, then Edgartown, East
Chop, West Chop, and finally Gay Head
which is red and must be moved.  You
can see all five if you start early and sail
with the tide and a northeast wind.  Sailboats
have white hulls and white sails,
but 100-year old Herreshoff sails
can be tanbark, and the fleet at Nantucket
parade with rainbow sails.  Rainbow
colors don’t include white, except before
the prism of rain where sunlight
includes all colors.

The Dove of Peace is pure white.  So was Jaws.
Moby Dick.  Cod that saved the Pilgrims
their first snowy winter.  Swans, no longer at Wasque. 
Ghosts.  Phantoms.  Unicorns.  Snow White. 
White Christmas, Bing Crosby, 1954.  White out
in the fog.  Wite-Out on typed pages.  White paper
for printers.  White papers for Presidents.
White wash.  White noise.  White collar jobs. 
White lies, damn lies and statistics, perhaps Mark Twain.

Oceans white with foam.  Alabaster cities gleam. 
Poles for flags.  Stars and white stripes
that once stood for purity and innocence. 
White wine.  White froth on dark beer.  Lines
of cocaine.  A Whiter Shade Of Pale, Procul Harum,
1967.  Two aspirin the morning after.

White is a new beginning.  Wiping the slate
clean.  White amplifies everything that comes
after it, like grass stains on a Red Sox uniform.
It is the color of the page before the poem. 
The canvas before the art.  The sheet of music
before the notes.  It is the possibility 
of everything. 

Thursday, June 12, 2014

The Class of '64

We
were here.
We were here in our beanies and blazers – preppies,
pub-schoolers, commuters too – college guys now,
but wondering how much those other guys knew.
Elvis, King of Pop, sang It’s Now or Never, and OWL
Lacey challenged: Look right, look left, one
of you three won’t make it, and backed it up
with a tough English exam, required Calculus
and a hundred yard swimming test.

What did we freshmen know when Castro
nationalized Esso?  When Khrushchev pounded
the UN podium with his shoe?  When the Civil Rights Act
of 1960 passed? When candidate Kennedy
spoke on the steps of the Hartford Times?
When the US committed troops to Vietnam? 

But when Playboy’s first  club opened in Chicago
when the Magnificent Seven screened in theatres
and the Flintstones on TV, when Cassius Clay
won his first professional bout, when beer
appeared in aluminum cans, we were ready.
It didn’t take us long to find The View,
and to learn our way to Conn College,
Holyoke and Smith.

As the of terror of teachers and tests waned, professors
became mentors, role-models and friends.  We
knew their first names, and followed their lives
if not all their lectures.  George Cooper, Snortin’
Norton Downs and Gene Davis made history
relevant and we became lawyers and professors. 
Bob Battis taught the dismal science, Ward Curren
was inspirational, and we became financiers
and financial advisors.  Gus Sapega brought
our punch cards to United Aircraft’s mainframes and we
became programmers and entrepreneurs.  Wendell
Burger in Biology and Henry DePhillips in Chem –
and we became doctors.  Trinity’s first woman
professor, Maggie Butcher taught us math and we
became actuaries and an insurance company president. 

We were here for Saturday morning classes –
well sort of – and were rewarded with hopes
of winning a football game.  And one glorious
Saturday afternoon in 1962, we did beat
undefeated Amherst 25-23.  Soccer brought us
to NCAA tournaments, and Barry Leghorn
set a basketball scoring record.  Baseball, track,
the beginning of crew – fourteen varsity sports,
who knew?

Music came to campus – Joan Baez,
Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, James Brown,
and the Ronettes.  Ah, the Ronettes –
three libido-pumping women in tight
white skirts slit to the thigh who were ready
to Be My, Be My Baby.  Fraternities, clubs
and musical groups separated us, and joined us
together too.  So did mixers, dating and proms.
We pledged and partied, played and performed
and hoisted our dates through Northam windows. 
And when we got too enthusiastic, the Medusa
reminded us how to be gentlemen.

We grew here – learning
something of ourselves, and of others
and of the world beyond our studies. 
As upper classmen, we debated  
the festering issues we had hadn’t
understood as freshmen – Castro
and our failed Bay of Pigs, Khrushchev
and the Cuban Missile Crisis,  Allen
and Chatfield arrested with SNCC  
in Georgia, President Kennedy
shot and dead in Dallas, the build-up  
of troops in Vietnam, the ticking clock
of our own draft eligibility. 

By 1964, there were Playboy Clubs
in a dozen cities – but not Hartford. 
Dr Strangelove was at the movies
and Peyton Place on TV.  Ousting King Elvis,
the Beatles starred on The Ed Sullivan Show.
In Miami, Cassius Clay TKO-ed Liston,
became Muhammed Ali, and a Muslim.
Beer companies introduced pop-top tabs
for our aluminum cans.  And at Trinity College
on a hot Sunday, ready to graduate
we were here.  We 
were here.

Saturday, May 31, 2014

Why I Sail a 100 Yearl-old Boat

Today when twin hulls foil on top
Why splash through waves that slow and stop?
With carbon-fiber’s proven use
Why still a mast of sitka spruce?
When titanium’s in demand
Why lay-up fiberglass by hand?
And as I stop to think of it
A GPS would help a bit.

The boat I sail’s a century old
At least in its design and mold.
When Princip shot Duke Ferdinand
That year when World War One began,
When Charlie Chaplin’s on-screen vamp
Introduced The Little Tramp,
Then Cap’n Nat got Emmons’ note
And made by hand the H12 boat.

He had a goal for ease of sail
So kids could learn in Buzzard’s gale,
Though it’s not hard to make her go,
The trick is not to sail her slow.
The gaff-rigged main can be perverse
The peak-set is the devil’s curse:
Stretch it, loose it, lower to lee,
Forget to raise – a tragedy!

There’re more mistakes that can occur
When putting up the spinnaker.
I’ve made them all and here’s my list –
It starts with getting a forestay-twist;
I’ve had it doused into the sea
Which slowed my pace considerably;
Other times it’s up too long
And I jibe the mark completely wrong.

This H12 boat can separate
The best, from sailors not-so-great
Because it tests their seamanship
Instead of high tech brinkmanship.
So when it’s a comparison
Of Cap’n Nat and Ellison,
I’m proud to sail, when I cast off,

The boat that’s named for Herreshoff.