It's a quarter after six, on an August evening of my 76th year. I drink a sherry. Here, my feet are free of the socks I insist on wearing, I am smoking.
The entertainment for tonight is planning tomorrow.
Tomorrow is the last mention of Summer.
You took me into custody, left my life's belongings behind. Sans identification, sans valuables, sans feeling.
Now there is only the zeitgeist of this age. The long lobes of wise men and the sagging ******* of yesterday. I write in cursive so you will have to talk to me.
I am the last syllable of my family. The seventies remain as a bastion of understanding. Do not blame
me for remembering you.
I have forgotten many things but not the warm Summer night. It creeps over me like your