The street is a horn the wind blows through,—
a ram’s horn, a car’s horn, a French horn,
but its melody, though plangent, may not be
the one you want to hear right now.

The river tows its dreams,
consigned to the dim edge of existence,
reciting dull epics to desolate piers.
Many, you included, are still abed
but already the avenues are crowded
with people like flags of more nations
than exist in the world. It is all
a pageant of some kind, though anxious
and colder than of late.

The last tropical rainstorms visit us.
It is a day in September full of whispers of anticipation.
It is a time of greetings like farewells and farewells like greetings.
For a depressing moment things seem foreordained,
entered in the prophetic ledger like age and decreptitude,—
the thought of white hair and rising snowbanks,
burdened trees breaking with a crack.