“Do the kitchen? I’ll give you Swedish Fish!”
I hear negotiations reach a peak,
numbers flying, the clatter of each dish—
the kids are home, visiting for the week.
That gummy currency bought lots of things—
a chore, “shotgun,” a TV show, a wish—
less like cash and more like sonar pings,
locating love that could be found with fish.
Adults now, pairing Fish with cabernet,
they tease and trade and get the kitchen done.
It’s like old times, and then they go away,
as we adjust to plus or minus one.
Everything’s clean, back in its place, or mostly.
And still I hear the sound of fish, but ghostly.
—Midge Goldberg
The Calculated Spectacle Behind Magnifica Humanitas
The first encyclical letter of Pope Leo XIV has been engaged widely on its substance, but its…
Will the Dallas Charter Update Finally Give Priests Due Process?
At their Florida meeting on June 10–12, the American Catholic bishops will vote on proposed revisions to…
The Genesis of Economics
We live, writes Italian economist Luigino Bruni in his The Economy of Salvation, in an exhausted age…