The Poet's Room

 

Once it had walls.

Now, between the pictures and the books,

the walls have disappeared

behind frames of color,

behind the smooth, hard spines of knowledge,

delicate with effrontery.

 

Unseen, the walls keep up

their work, their practical acquiescence

to an impractical man;

stand fast against the noisy

neighbors, the outside wind, the moving dust--

the desire of these to take over.

 

Pallid, unknown, the walls

manage to contain a life,

to keep it contained

even in the squalor of paper and fume of pipes.

The room continues, plus or minus a cat,

plus or minus a dream.

 

The poet sits in it, transfixed;

counts iambs, trochees.

It is a rented room only,

but everything inside it is his.

Like the walls, the poet

holds up hidden boundaries

against the inswarm of his nothingness..

Modern Age  (Spring 2004)