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Costa Maya

Catharine Savage Brosman

At Costa Maya, in the Yucatan,we walked the yellow jetty from the ship,with throngs of other visitors, to seea tacky shoppersโ€™ mecca, with a mall,a plaza, palm trees, piles...

Games of Chance

Catharine Savage Brosman

Youโ€™re bound to lose: the house will always win, in time. At first, though, Fortune flatters those who yield to her enticements. You begin with bits of luck, small...

Providence

Catharine Savage Brosman

For pleasure, Fortune, a designer, weaves. We are her stuffโ€”yarn, thread, and loom, ideal. Her tapestry seems flawless; she conceives it cunningly, attended by her wheel, whose mechanism works,...

Dust Bowl

Catharine Savage Brosman

โ€”After photographs by Dorothea Lange taken in the Texas Panhandle Alone, a woman stands in black and white surveying a discolored sky above and nothing on the earth around...

Dinner at Gautreau’s

Catharine Savage Brosman

Iโ€™m seated at Gautreauโ€™s, uptown, with Laine,fine student, now good friend. Obliged to bookan early hour—few choices in this bane,the Covid sequel—we take time to look at wine lists,...

Saint Gertrude

Catharine Savage Brosman

The patroness of those beset by mice and rats, she stands before red tapestry. Blue floor tiles feature her preferred device: crude mousetraps, set to spring. Her sanctity is...

Saint Lucy

Catharine Savage Brosman

She is already what she will become.In crimson cape, her neck pierced by a sword,she holds the palm of peace and martyrdom— both suffering and glory, her reward. The...

Saint Vincent of Saragossa

Catharine Savage Brosman

His attributes are few—a book, a rodwith three large hooks. But it cannot conveythe tortures, multiple, endured for God—the rack, a gridiron, burnt flesh wrenched away. Portrayed in deaconโ€™s...

On a Photograph of My Cousin Jean

Catharine Savage Brosman

As lovely as a girl aged twenty-twocan be—intelligent, slim, self-possessed,and beautiful. Itโ€™s Florida; itโ€™s newto her, like marriage. Smiling, smartly dressed, she poses, shaded by a palm, besidea terra...

Street Piano

Catharine Savage Brosman

The movers get it outโ€”a Steinway grand,half-rolled, half-carried to the street. A crowd,molecular, implicit, is at handalready. Music hovers meanwhile, proud to weave into the day its ideal strand.A...

An Epitaph for my Parents’ Graves

Catharine Savage Brosman

Their headstones now have sunken into sand,amid tall weeds, some cholla, scattered sage,the writing visible, but not at hand.Their years among the dead compose my age. That which they...

Smoky Sky

Catharine Savage Brosman

The skies are sick, a feverish, jaundiced gray,malodorous with foul effluviadissembling skyline and the light of day—crepuscular, infernal opera. The pines, our lofty but immobile kin,more vincible by axe,...

A Summer Idyll

Catharine Savage Brosman

Weโ€™re superannuated now, no doubt. Impossible to overlook the facts: age blotches skin, puts muscle tone to rout, winnows our hair, and gives us cataracts. Patโ€™s doctors rule. No...

At Sea

Catharine Savage Brosman

We stream on color: blue, aquamarine, dove grey. To look straight down gives vertigo, but farther out the surface seems serene, both concentration and reflective flow. Horizons offer us...

On a Certain Viennese Doctor

Catharine Savage Brosman

Inventing a refined disease afflicting all the human race, he took away ideas of ease, exposed us, left us in disgrace. Weโ€™re ego, libido, and id, with sundry drivesโ€a...