Tag: Wallace Stevens

  • For National Poetry Month, I’m sharing poems each day, one that I’ve written followed by whatever one from three sites that share a poem a day that strikes my fancy that day.

    Yet here again I reference Wallace Stevens’ “mouse in the wall” and also another poem of his “The Man with the Blue Guitar.” This was the last poem of the poetry reading I did back in 2004.

    Poetry

    It all starts with an ocean of words
    cascading,
          wind chimes carrying across
    suburban streets stray thoughts,
    counterintuitive.

    I want my Sundays back,
    no baby back ribs
          to stir my dreams,
    and the will power to organize
    this life into some semblance of
    simple. 

    It's not that he minds the clutter
    as much as
           the appearance of clutter,
    it's what it appears his life is,
    what can be viewed by
    a passerby like that glance, half-
    glare, caught from a passing car.

    Or the kids in the back of the bus
    giggling, snickering
    at those who follow too close
    what they say to each other
    about the middle-aged
    man in car, beat-
    up car. It's all
    self-referential.

    **

    Except for the man
    with the blue guitar
    who strums beside
    the white lake
    in winter,
    his fingers
    flow over
    the frets
    intuitively.
    (It all comes back
    to Wallace
    and the mouse
    in the wall,
    doesn't it?)
    This mystery
    for a moment
    becomes clear
    or not.

    ***

    It was like one day in sixth grade
    when you looked up
    and the world became
    blue,
    tinted your
    perspective on
    everything.

    The reds
    disappeared
    for a while
    but are back
    now
    in crimson,
    maroon,
    vermilion.

    Now you become a chameleon
    rising out of
    the dust
    until the colors
    diffuse
    out across your horizons
    into your dreams.

    Listen, the wind chimes.

    The above poem is best read in desktop and landscape to preserve the integrity of the line breaks as I intended, especially in the first part of the poem.

    Instead of leaving you with a poem from one of the three sites as I have been doing, I will refer you to Stevens’ poem aforementioned.