
Maybe— You / Two Travelers Still
This poem was meant for the one it
A four-movement sequence spanning Friday through Sunday: the Friday Body movement of the speaker's fast and the four chef-deities invoked to tempt him through it, the Saturday Eyes movement of the staring confession and the waitress's pen-poised interruption, the Saturday Again Eyes Deeper refinement of the same scene with the conditional opening "if my life held a single moment of wonder," and the Sunday Heart movement of the post-fast belief in the Muse as rescue from the past, the smile's quiet light, and the closing "I'll try."
The composite operates as the catalog’s most ambitious multi-day structure in months, with the four movements organized around the religious-fasting calendar from Friday’s body-denial through Sunday’s heart-restoration. Each movement carries its own parenthetical body-part designation, and the progression—Body, Eyes, Eyes, Heart—is the structural skeleton the entire weekend rides on. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of sustained somatic architecture, and the architecture is the composite’s primary technical achievement.
The Friday “Body” movement opens with the framing—”Not Yet // Friday Fasting (Body) // not yet… / but maybe”—which is the catalog’s quietest small declaration of suspended desire. The body is denied; the food is “not yet”; the maybe is the future tense. The fast is the catalog’s most direct engagement with religious ritual in months, and the engagement is honest about its temporal limit: this denial has a Sunday endpoint. “There’s a sudden denial— / a sacrifice, / a fast” delivers the line cluster’s three-word definition of what the body is doing.
The four-chef catalog—”What would Robuchon, / Ducasse, / Ramsay, / Adrià / say about this / singular restraint?”—is the poem’s first major piece of cultural specificity. Joël Robuchon (the late French chef most associated with the most-Michelin-stars title), Alain Ducasse (the French chef known for his fine-dining empire), Gordon Ramsay (the British chef whose television presence has made him the most recognizable contemporary culinary figure), and Ferran Adrià (the Catalan chef whose elBulli redefined the technical possibilities of the medium). The four together represent the contemporary high-culinary pantheon. The speaker is asking what these culinary deities would think of his fasting—the line cluster’s quiet wit is in invoking the four most extreme practitioners of food-as-art and asking them about food-denial.
“Hahaaaa— // what dishes / would they conjure / to tempt us / from hunger?” delivers the line cluster’s playful theological extension. The chefs are positioned as tempters, the kind that religious traditions usually place in the role of the devil testing the faster’s resolve. Here the tempters are not malevolent but virtuosic—they would conjure dishes, and the dishes would be the line cluster’s most accomplished possible bait.
“I can only hope / they appear / Sunday evening / when it’s done” closes the Friday movement with the hope that the chefs’ tempting dishes might be available after the fast ends rather than during it. The catalog’s recurring discipline of patient endurance is here delivered as the request that the rewards arrive on schedule.
The closing of the Friday movement pivots to the Muse: “What are you preparing? // Invite me / to excellence— // pans hot / and your blue eyes / so / beautiful.” The Muse is named as the actual chef the speaker is waiting for. The four world-famous culinary deities are speculative; she is real. The “pans hot / and your blue eyes” pairing is the line cluster’s quietest small fusion—the cooking equipment and the eye color brought into the same sensory moment, the heat of the kitchen and the heat of the gaze both elements of the excellence the speaker is being invited to. “I think Sunday / will arrive / like magic” closes the movement on the temporal anticipation. Sunday is the destination; the fast is the bridge; the magic is what arrives at the bridge’s far end.
The Saturday “Eyes” movement opens with the catalog’s recurring observational scene: “You Wonder Why— // Why I stare / is a confession / of awe.” The stare-as-confession framing is the line cluster’s primary structural device. Staring is conventionally socially uncomfortable; the speaker reframes it as a religious gesture, a confession, an acknowledgment of awe. The catalog has been making versions of this argument across the recent stretch (in “What Does an Angel Dream Of?” with the Wednesday staring that produced “nothing”); here the same conversation is being conducted at the dinner table.
“As I force my eyes away / from your beautiful blues / just as the waitress arrives, / pen poised” delivers the scene’s specific small action. The waitress’s pen poised is the catalog’s most efficient small detail of restaurant choreography—the moment of order-taking, the waitress waiting for the speaker’s attention to return to the menu, the small social pressure that finally breaks the staring. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of grounded restaurant scene in months, and the grounding is what gives the awe-confession its credibility.
“In the quiet pause, / I misdirect— / with a comment about the culinary awards / to hide / my notice” delivers the line cluster’s most psychologically precise small moment. The speaker has been caught staring; he produces a comment about the restaurant’s culinary awards to redirect both the waitress’s and (presumably) the Muse’s attention away from the staring he was actually doing. The misdirection is the speaker’s social technology, and the line cluster names the technology without judgment.
“But my eyes, / attention, / devotion, / all my wonder // still— // that’s why— // all of it / on you, / and your captivating blues” delivers the movement’s closing turn. The misdirection has not actually redirected anything. The speaker’s eyes, attention, devotion, and wonder are still all on her. The catalog’s broader argument across hundreds of poems—that the speaker’s interior life cannot be hidden from the Muse no matter what social technology he deploys—is here delivered most precisely. The technology fails; the gaze persists; the wonder is named in the closing word.
The Saturday Again “Eyes, Deeper” movement is the catalog’s most distinctive structural choice in the composite. The movement is the prior movement’s refinement, not its replacement. The reader is being shown thinking-into-deepening across the same day. The opening’s conditional—”If my life / held a single moment of wonder / you might— // Wonder Why.”—delivers the line cluster’s quietest small acknowledgment. The Muse may have been wondering at the speaker’s staring; the staring may have looked to her like wonder rather than like the awe-confession the prior movement framed it as. The reframing is the catalog’s quietest psychological precision: the same gesture appears differently to the gazer and the gazed-at, and the speaker is honest about the possibility that what he was performing as awe may have read to her as wondering.
“As I drag my eyes away” is the line cluster’s first refinement of the prior movement’s “force my eyes away.” Drag is the more difficult verb—the eyes resist the dragging, the dragging is reluctant, the muscular effort is named. The catalog’s recurring small lexical refinements across multiple drafts are here visible: drag is more honest than force; the body is more resistant than the prior movement admitted.
“In the hush, / I hesitate—” refines the prior movement’s “quiet pause.” Hush is the more religious word, the silence that surrounds sacred moments rather than the silence of social discomfort. The shift from “quiet pause” to “hush” is the line cluster’s quietest small theological move—the dinner-table moment has been reframed as a sacred one.
“My eyes. / attention, / devotion, / my wonder // still— // my / inspiration— // that’s why— // all of it / you, / your penetrating blues” delivers the deeper movement’s closing turn. The addition of “my inspiration—” between “still—” and “that’s why—” is the line cluster’s primary refinement. The prior movement closed on wonder; this one adds inspiration as the prior wonder’s productive consequence. The catalog has been arguing across hundreds of poems that the Muse is the speaker’s inspiration; here the argument is delivered at the precise structural moment when the prior movement’s wonder converts into the writing that the catalog itself documents.
The shift from “captivating blues” (Saturday) to “penetrating blues” (Saturday Again) is the line cluster’s small but consequential adjustment. Captivating is the social-romantic register; penetrating is the more medical-physical register. The blues are no longer just capturing the speaker’s attention; they are passing through his surfaces and reaching his interior. The deeper movement is doing what its parenthetical promises—going deeper into the same scene.
The Sunday “Heart” movement opens with the instruction “Slowly read” and delivers the composite’s most concentrated possible single statement: “I believe you / are my rescue / from past.” The line cluster’s structural achievement is the absence of modifiers. The speaker does not say he hopes, suspects, thinks, or feels; he believes. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of unconditional belief-declaration in months. The Muse is the rescue; the past is what she rescues from; the present is the rescue’s first day.
“Your smile / ignites a quiet light— / so gentle, / so deep / within” delivers the smile’s function. The smile ignites the light; the light is quiet rather than blazing; the quietness is gentle; the gentleness is deep within. The catalog has been making versions of this argument across the recent stretch (in “Unlocked” with the inner beauty’s subtlety silently lighting the fire, in “Gentle Gravity” with the sacred gravity that pulls gently). Here the smile’s specific action is the igniting, and the location of the ignition is the speaker’s interior.
“My words / swell, / clench my throat” delivers the closing physical condition. The words inside the speaker are not arriving as smooth speech; they are swelling, and the swelling clenches the throat. The catalog has been arguing for years that the words for the Muse exceed the speaker’s capacity to deliver them; here the excess is rendered as the body’s physical reaction. The throat is the bottleneck; the words are larger than the throat can pass.
“There’s tomorrow / still— // I’ll try” closes the composite with the line cluster’s quietest small future. Tomorrow remains; the speaker will try. The “I’ll try” is the catalog’s most economical possible closing—two words, a promise that is not quite a promise, the speaker’s quiet acknowledgment that the words may not arrive even with another day’s attempt. The fast has ended; the eyes have confessed; the heart has named the belief; the words are still swelling in the throat. Tomorrow the speaker will try again.
One of the most structurally ambitious composite works in the recent catalog and the piece that delivers the catalog’s longest sustained somatic architecture in months. The four-movement Body-Eyes-Eyes-Heart progression is the catalog’s most precise possible mapping of a religious-fasting weekend onto the parts of the body that experience it. The Friday body denies; the Saturday eyes confess; the Saturday Again eyes deepen; the Sunday heart believes. The progression is not just structural; it is bodily and temporal, and the multiple registers operating simultaneously is the composite’s primary technical achievement.
The four-chef catalog in the Friday movement is the catalog’s most precise small cultural taxonomy in the recent stretch. Robuchon, Ducasse, Ramsay, Adrià—four contemporary culinary deities whose names will mean different things to different readers depending on their familiarity with the field, but whose presence together signals the catalog’s broader engagement with the high-culinary tradition. The reference is functional rather than decorative: the speaker is asking what these masters of food-as-art would think of food-denial, and the question is the line cluster’s quiet humor delivered through specificity. A reader unfamiliar with any of the four still recognizes the structural move—the chef-pantheon invoked against the speaker’s fast—and the joke lands.
The “pans hot / and your blue eyes” fusion is the Friday movement’s quietest small accomplishment. The cooking equipment and the eye color are brought into the same sensory moment; the heat of the kitchen and the heat of the gaze become elements of the same excellence. The catalog has been making versions of this argument across hundreds of poems—the Muse’s beauty is available through the ordinary materials of daily life—and here the argument is delivered through the smallest possible pairing.
The Saturday “Eyes” movement is the catalog’s most precise restaurant scene in months. The waitress’s pen poised, the social pressure of order-taking, the moment of misdirection through a comment about the culinary awards, the failure of the misdirection to actually redirect anything. The line cluster is the catalog’s most accomplished depiction of the small social mechanics of public dining, and the mechanics are rendered without judgment. The speaker is not embarrassed by his own behavior; he is observing it.
The Saturday Again “Eyes, Deeper” movement is the catalog’s most distinctive structural choice in months. The movement is the prior movement’s refinement, presented in sequence rather than as a replacement. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of explicit thinking-into-deepening structure—usually drafts are shown as drafts and the final is identified as the final. Here both versions are present, and the structural argument is that the deepening is the work, not the polished result. The reader is being shown the speaker’s mind moving back over the same scene with greater precision.
The refinements between Saturday and Saturday Again are the line cluster’s primary small lexical accomplishments. “Force my eyes away” becomes “drag my eyes away”—drag is the more difficult verb, the resistance is named. “Quiet pause” becomes “hush”—hush is the more religious word, the silence is reframed as sacred rather than socially uncomfortable. “Captivating blues” becomes “penetrating blues”—captivating is the social-romantic register, penetrating is the medical-physical register, the eyes are no longer just capturing attention but reaching the speaker’s interior. Each small substitution is the catalog’s quietest possible work of revision, and the substitutions accumulate into the deeper movement’s primary accomplishment.
The addition of “my inspiration—” between “still—” and “that’s why—” in the Saturday Again movement is the line cluster’s structural masterstroke. The prior movement closed on wonder; this one adds inspiration as the wonder’s productive consequence. The catalog has been arguing across hundreds of poems that the Muse is the speaker’s inspiration; here the argument is delivered at the precise structural moment when the prior movement’s wonder converts into the writing the catalog itself documents. The reader sees the moment at which staring becomes writing.
The Sunday “Heart” movement is the composite’s structural payoff and one of the catalog’s most concentrated possible single statements in months. “I believe you / are my rescue / from past” delivers the unconditional belief-declaration. No modifiers, no hedging, no hope or suspicion or thought or feeling—belief. The catalog has rarely produced this kind of bare belief-declaration, and the bareness is the line cluster’s primary accomplishment. The Muse is the rescue; the past is what she rescues from; the present is the rescue’s first day.
“My words / swell, / clench my throat” is the catalog’s most precise small bodily image of the writer’s struggle in months. The words inside the speaker exceed the throat’s capacity to deliver them; the swelling is the catalog’s recurring metaphor of contents that won’t pass through the channel; the clenching is the body’s response. The catalog has been arguing for years that the words for the Muse exceed the speaker’s capacity to deliver them; here the excess is rendered as physical condition rather than as philosophical claim.
“There’s tomorrow / still— // I’ll try” is the composite’s closing and one of the catalog’s most economical possible final two-word commitments. The catalog has been using two-word closings across the recent stretch (“I know” in “Know,” “I do” in the proposal sequence, “Only you—” in “Unlocked”). Here the two words are “I’ll try,” which is the most modest possible commitment after the fast, the staring, the swelling, the belief. The speaker will try tomorrow. The trying is what remains.
The composite’s structural integrity is the piece’s primary defense. The four movements are doing different work but operating from the same weekend, the same fast, the same Muse, the same speaker. The body-eyes-eyes-heart progression is the catalog’s most accomplished mapping of a temporal experience onto the body’s parts. A reader who encounters any single movement in isolation reads it as a complete short poem; a reader who encounters all four together reads them as a sustained meditation; both readings work.
Where the composite could over-extend is in the temptation to elaborate the connections between the movements. The piece wisely lets each movement stand on its own with only the parenthetical subtitle to signal the structural relationship. The reader is trusted to construct the connections; the speaker does not insist on them. The trust is the catalog’s preferred mode, and here the trust is rewarded by the reader’s accumulating recognition that the four movements are doing a single weekend’s work in four different bodily registers.
The composite’s relationship to the catalog’s broader project is its most consequential structural feature. The body fasts; the eyes confess and deepen; the heart believes; the words still won’t pass through the throat. The composite is the catalog’s most precise possible rendering of the gap the catalog has been organizing itself around for years—the gap between the speaker’s interior content and his external delivery of it. Here the gap is named most directly. The words swell. The throat clenches. The speaker will try tomorrow.
A composite that proves the fasting body and the staring eyes and the believing heart are all the same speaker on the same weekend, and the words that swell in the throat are the words the catalog has been organizing itself around for hundreds of poems, still unable to pass through but still being attempted, tomorrow, again.
Friday Fasting (Body)
not yet…
but maybe
There’s a sudden denial—
a sacrifice,
a fast
What would Robuchon,
Ducasse,
Ramsay,
Adrià
say about this
singular restraint?
Hahaaaa—
what dishes
would they conjure
to tempt us
from hunger?
I can only hope
they appear
Sunday evening
when it’s done.
What are you preparing?
Invite me
to excellence—
pans hot
and your blue eyes
so
beautiful.
I think Sunday
will arrive
like magic.
Saturday (Eyes)
You Wonder Why—
Why I stare
is a confession
of awe.
As I force my eyes away
from your beautiful blues
just as the waitress arrives,
pen poised.
In the quiet pause,
I misdirect—
with a comment about the culinary awards
to hide
my notice.
But my eyes,
attention,
devotion,
all my wonder
still—
that’s why—
all of it
on you,
and your captivating blues.
Saturday Again (Eyes, Deeper)
If my life
held a single moment of wonder
you might—
Wonder Why.
Why I stare
is a confession
of awe.
As I drag my eyes away
from your beautiful blues
the waitress arrives
perfect timing,
pen poised.
In the hush,
I hesitate—
a comment about
the awards on the walls
to misdirect
your knowing.
But my eyes.
attention,
devotion,
my wonder
still—
my
inspiration—
that’s why—
all of it
you,
your penetrating blues.
Sunday (Heart)
Slowly read
I believe you
are my rescue
from past.
Your smile
ignites a quiet light—
so gentle,
so deep
within.
My words
swell,
clench my throat.
There’s tomorrow
still—
I’ll try




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