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Major Jackson is the author of Leaving Saturn (University of Georgia Press, 2002) and a new book of poems, Hoops, out this month from W.W. Norton. He is a professor of English at the University of Vermont.

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Letter to Brooks: Spring Garden
by Major Jackson

1
When you have forgotten (to bring into  
        Play that fragrant morsel of rhetoric,
Crisp as autumnal air), when you
        Have forgotten, say, sunlit corners, brick
        Full of skyline, rowhomes, smokestacks,
Billboards, littered rooftops & wondered  
What bread wrappers reflect of our hunger,

2
When you have forgotten wide-brimmed hats,
        Sunday back-seat leather rides & church,
The doorlock like a silver cane, the broad backs  
        Swaying or the great moan deep churning,
        & the shimmer flick of flat sticks, the lurch
Forward, skip, hands up Aileyesque drop,
When you have forgotten the meaningful bop,

3
Hustlers and their care-what-may, blasé
        Ballet and flight, when you have forgotten
Scruffy yards, miniature escapes, the way
        Laundry lines strung up sag like shortened
        Smiles, when you have forgotten the Fish Man
Barking his catch in inches up the street  
“I’ve got porgies. I’ve got trout. Feeesh

4
Man,” or his scoop and chain scale,  
        His belief in shad and amberjack; when  
You have forgotten Ajax and tin pails,
        Blue crystals frothing on marble front
        Steps Saturday mornings, or the garden
Of old men playing checkers, the curbs  
White-washed like two lines out to the burbs,

5
Or the hopscotch squares painted new
        In the street, the pitter-patter of feet  
Landing on rhymes. “How do you  
        Like the weather, girls? All in together, girls,
        January, February, March, April... ”
The jump ropes’ portentous looming,
Their great, aching love blooming.

6
When you have forgotten packs of grape-
        Flavored Now & Laters, the squares
Of sugar flattening on the tongue, the elation
        You felt reaching into the corner-store jar,  
        Grasping a handful of Blow Pops, candy bars
With names you didn’t recognize but came  
To learn. All the turf battles. All the war games.

7
When you have forgotten popsicle stick
        Races along the curb and hydrant fights,  
Then, retrieve this letter from your stack
        I’ve sent by clairvoyant post & read by light,
        For it brought me as much longing and delight.
This week’s Father’s Day; I’ve a long ride to Philly.
I’ll give this to Gramps, then head to Black Lily.


 
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