Captain Holm I see Captain Holm in yellow slicker, right hand behind him on the stick of the tiller, feet in the well of his orange Sailfish: like a butterfly's single wing, it slants upright over the bay. Captain Holm, our neighbor, eighty years old, thin and sclerotic, can still fold legs into the hull, balance a bony buttock on the shelf of the stern. With a tug at the mainstay he makes his sail trim up, sniffs out whatever wind there is. This raw day, Captain Holm's alone, his scrap of color the only one on the wide bay, Winter sunset transfuses that frail wing. =Tansy Mattingly