Sunday, March 8, 2026

 

March 8, 2026

Gentle rain. Hacked bamboo yesterday, planted lupines, hit Mountain Madre with friends from the North Side. At table many remembrances with the details gone awry, or at least disputed. My restaurant bills are less now that meals do not include alcohol. Watched Netflix’s The Dinosaurs with anticipation and delight. Watched the film Hamnet. What do I think? I’ll know in a little while. The last scene, where hands reach from the Pit to comfort Hamlet dying on stage, seemed to me the epitome of the power of theater, the moment that all else leads to and recedes from. Wept alone in my own house without understanding that could be put into words. 

Howells this morning, “Like as the hart.” When I was singing at Second English Lutheran in Baltimore and impatient with anything after the Renaissance, that seemed to me the one modern work I would have called of a piece with the ancients. Still would, though it is no longer alone. Today we did it meager justice. Tried to speak to T as we left church, but his face was red with fury, complaining to his wife about K’s correcting his own personal missed note. “I KNEW I had the wrong note! He didn’t have to stop everybody and–” I have been him, my rage banked by having no wife to share it with. K has not learned how to deal with mistakes, addressing them as one would a character flaw rather than an incident. One’s misbehavior is publicized and laboriously exorcized. 

Slept too big, woke out of the mood to fill the rest of the day with deeds. 

SS has cast Purification, asserting it was agony to do so. Not going to ask why it was so hard. The first thing you expect is that nobody liked the script. 

Strange, pervasive change in perception, the greatest one I remember, greater even than the change from childhood into adolescence or adolescence into adulthood, though perhaps I don’t remember them as sharp as they were. The image laid before me to describe is of a vast dome filled with space and clarity, and that is my mind. Like clear water under morning sun. Still. White and golden. I think of Yeats’s smiling sages sitting on their height in “Lapis Lazuli.” In times gone by I have known compassion as a correct behavioral choice, but I had not known it as a living thing, a plenum through which the soul moves and by which it must be pervaded. I wear perception like a coat, pulling it around me. I did nothing to bring this on; it just is. You hunt the quarry for a hundred years and come home to find it standing at your front door. Rage still comes, but it is like the throwing of a stone into a river, whatever effect it has passing in a moment, the flow continuing. I compare my spirit to my actual age, and the comparison is ludicrous. I am a boy. This is a boy’s white morning. Through my security cameras I watch me hobbling up the front steps, grasping the pillars to make it to the top,


 March 6, 2026

Morning by the river. T was at the cafĂ©, running in half a minute down the list of his recent triumphs, his new grandchild, how his kids have moved back to town, how his next novel comes out in a few months. He introduced me to his wife, pretty much (physically) a female version of himself. Our last contact was when he failed, or refused, to produce a blurb for Beautiful Necklaces on the day it was due, after assuring me nothing would please him more. “I just can’t” said his plaintive email. Whether he ran out of time or hated the book I never asked. Clearly he’s over it. I’m not.

Held off gardening until dusk, when I filled the concrete Grecian urns with violas. 

 

March 5, 2026

Gorgeous spring day. Shopped at Israel’s and spent the morning planting what I’d bought. Sat on the pond bench and watched a song sparrow and a robin bathing on different rocks. I can feel the heat of sunburn on my head and neck. It is the most terrible world, and yet the song sparrows come down and bathe on a flat rock. Contested in the dark with the Lord the Betrayer, who remains the Betrayer, and yet the song sparrows come to bathe on the flat rocks. 


 


March 4, 2026


Mozart’s Requiem last night. A privilege to sing. I heard frog singing in my pond as the moon rose.


 

March 3, 2026

Huge gardening day. Many porch pots filled and planted, items put into the east yard to try to get something to grow amid the gravel, in the clay and shade. The nursery lady said “try these,” and so I do. Bought wholesale a huge box of anonymous peonies, got them into the ground. Planting one thing digs up another, and so things get moved around, compromising what original plan there was. 


 

March 2, 2026

An hour before the AVLGMC meeting at my house, a van arrived with people in it who wanted to demonstrate the Kirby vacuum cleaner. I said “OK” because they said they’d get a prize if I just listened for a while. It’s been a long time since I was so beside myself with impatience. 


Saint David

 March 1, 2026

St. David’s Day. Daffodils peeking triumphantly through the loam. Chatterbox choir substitute frayed my nerves. Power drill-voiced Harry the Substitute Baritone frayed my nerves. Left lovely sandwiches behind to get out of church as fast as possible. Amazing nap dreams did not fray my nerves.