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Thursday, September 18, 2025

ROBERT, NO LONGER (AM I YOUNG)

by Jeremy Nathan Marks




 

If we are refused the right to mourn

the death by fire of children in Denver

then the words of Dylan Thomas

have perhaps become equivalent to those 

of Redford’s opponent in The Candidate

 

Crocker Jarmon who bore the farm away 

with owls afloat on half wings, their beaks 

marked for taxidermies at the hands of one 

who holds their lease in a poem of a different 

name.

 

Robert, no longer am I young.

You are not bringing dignity to the undignified

character of Roy Hobbes any longer, a figment

whose greatest sin was his appetite, especially when

it came to the manager’s niece who knew beauty 

might've wanted love 

 

Redford, you could play the occasional villain

but never scum. And in your absence I wonder

if Hobbes returns to form, to the point Malamud

makes about appetites that can’t be contained

 

By outfield fences. Or the imaginations of fine

young fans. They don’t come to see you anymore

because the game, which was always partly

of the mind, dwells today in a tiny room with poor 

lighting

 

And no natural grass. Robert, I am young no longer

because the way you made Bob Woodward a warrior 

of pen on paper is impossible when so many never learn 

to write. A confession isn’t a memoir and yet we can’t escape

the text. The text is all; not even the body can tell foot from hand

without a nib.

 

But you fought for the eagle, wild rivers, expanses of mingling

bodies. Perhaps a new generation of actors will find their agency

in florid rock, beyond the tract of human mouths, who use the tongue

as a latch to withdraw monologues into long sequences of silence.

Where physical grace

 

Which you had in abundance

 

Returns talkies to their shelves. At least for awhile. 

Time enough to hear the condor, a once great Colorado 

move alpine melt waters past sumps in cabbage deserts

end this beanfield war with gestures worthy of a grand mime. 

Marcel Marceau for our riparian rights 

 

Jeremiah Johnson for the defense. 



Jeremy Nathan Marks lives in Canada. His latest book is Captain's Kismet (Alien Buddha, 2025).