DPF / Wright

For (and “after”) Picasso, from A Book of Luminous Things.

from Depiction of Childhood / by Franz Wright

It is the little girl
guiding the minotaur
with her free hand —

DPF / Lowell

For heat-induced delays and fathers and summers, from Eight American Poets.

from My Last Afternoon with Uncle Devereux Winslow / by Robert Lowell

Nowhere was anywhere after a summer
at my Grandfather’s farm.

DPF / Roethke

For dreams of flying, from Eight American Poets.

from Her Longing / by Theodore Roethke

Before this longing,
I lived serene as a fish,
At one with the plants in the pond,
The mare’s tail, the floating frogbit

DPF / Collins

For lost words, lines, dreams, from The Best American Poetry: 1997, edited by James Tate, series editor David Lehman.

from Lines Lost Among Trees / by Billy Collins

home to lost epics,
unremembered names,
and fugitive dreams
such as the one I had last night,

which, like a fantastic city in pencil,
erased itself
in the bright morning air
just as I was waking up.

DPF / Glück

For the days we face, from The House on Marshland.

from The Undertaking / by Louise Glück

The darkness lifts, imagine, in your lifetime.

DPF / Glück

For Persephone, from The House on Marshland.

from Pomegranate / by Louise Glück

First he gave me
his heart. It was
red fruit containing
many seeds, the skin
leathery, unlikely.

DPF / Tate

For one of my favorite poems of all time, from Return to the City of White Donkeys.

from Of Whom Am I Afraid? / by James Tate

          At some point there was an
old, grizzled farmer standing next to me holding
a rake, and I said to him, ‘Have you ever read
much Emily Dickinson?’ ‘Sure,’ he said, ‘I
reckon I’ve read all of her poems at least a
dozen times. She’s a real pistol….’

DPF / Rail

For the highway that edges our small town, from Highway 99: a literary journey through California’s Great Central Valley.

from The Field / by DeWayne Rail

The field is the last refuge of squirrels,
Jackrabbits, and mice. Deserted, left
To its devices, it has taken years
To grow a thick cover of weeds that tangle

And arch over long tunnels.

DPF / Borges

For you and your other yous, if this is you, too, from The FSG Book of Twentieth-Century Latin Poetry.

from Borges and I / by Jorge Luis Borges, translated by Willis Barnstone

The other one, Borges, is to whom things happen.

DPF / Huidobro

For sailboats and blue and birthdays, from The FSG Book of Twentieth-Century Latin Poetry.

from Altazor: Canto III / by Vicente Huidobro, translated by Ilan Stavans

The sky is that pure flowing hair
Braided by the hands of the aeronaut