Thread: OUR LAUREATES
View Single Post
  #10  
Unread 12-07-2001, 08:46 PM
Robert J. Clawson Robert J. Clawson is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 3,401
Post

Remarkable that the job description should include "lightning rod," in that Collins’ 1998 book is "Picnic, Lightning." The title poem takes off with an epigraph from Nabokov:

"My very photogenic mother died in a freak accident (picnic, lightning) when I was three." Lolita.


It is possible to be struck by a meteor
or a single-engine plane
while reading in a chair at home.
Safes drop from rooftops
and flatten the odd pedestrian
mostly within the panels of the comics,
but still, we know it is possible,
as well as the flash of summer lightning,
the thermos toppling over,
spilling out on the grass.

And we know the message
can be delivered from within.
The heart, no valentine,
decides to quit after lunch,
the power shut off like a switch,
or a tiny dark ship is unmoored
into the flow of the body’s rivers,
the brain a monastery,
defenseless on the shore.

This is what I think about
when I shovel compost
into a wheelbarrow,
and when I fill the long flower boxes,
then press into rows
the limp roots of red impatiens –
the instant hand of Death
always ready to burst forth
from the sleeve of his voluminous cloak.

Then the soil is full of marvels,
bits of leaf like flakes off a fresco,
red-brown pine needles, a beetle quick
to burrow back under the loam.
Then the wheelbarrow is a wilder blue,
the clouds a brighter white,

and all I hear is the rasp of the steel edge
against a round of stone,
the small plants singing
with lifted faces, and the click
of the sundial
as one hour sweeps into the next.


Billy Collins
Reply With Quote