Poetry- To the Reader of this Poem



To The Reader Of This Poem



I imagine you
perhaps reclined,
on a couch or a bed, a bench perhaps,
though best in a hammock,
where the poem is used like a good herb,
to season
the conversation of birds, or the first blooms of Spring.
I imagine you reclined, for poems are best received
as plants receive rain
or sunlight.
You cannot chase a poem, or hunt it
as you would a deer.
Some say you can chase love, or that you must,
but I think that’s just foolery.  With love
you cannot take
what must be given.  And so it is with a poem.
So I imagine you reclined.

And it would be nice
if you were interested in listening.  The kind
where you exit
the drumming of blood.  Such as a grandparent does,
who seems
to have nothing better, absolutely nothing better to do
than listen to the ramblings of a child in a swing.  Until
the creaking of a swing, or the chatter of a child
rises into the air undivorced.

Yes, you should be that way.  So that, listening,
you’ll reach the end of the poem, carried in its arms,
as if waking from a dream
you did not know you were having.  You’ll wonder
if you’ve  been dreaming at all, or just remembering, and you’ll say
“What was that poem all about?”



2.18.12

Previous
Previous

Poetry- The Mockingbird

Next
Next

Poem- How to Climb a Tree