David de Young, born in Illinois, is the author of the poetry collection A Flash of Insight and Other Poems. He earned his MFA from New York University’s low-residency program in Paris and received the Selden L. Whitcomb Prize in Poetry. He lives in Espoo, Finland, with his wife and two daughters.

Looking at Stars with George

by David de Young
Bright star, would I were stedfast as thou art—
                                                                      —John Keats

We crunch through the snow in the predawn
blue-black cold and he tells me about the stars:
Vega, Betelgeuse, Arcturus, Rigel. And the bright one,
Venus, not even a star. I’m sixteen, he’s seventeen.
I’m glad to have an older person to talk to, someone to listen.

Grasping neither time nor space,
we set a date to meet again, forty years in the future,
when in our fifties, we seldom speak,
the stars still burning, still dying,
moving farther and farther apart.


Read on . . .

“Perseids and Other Poems” by Norman Dubie