Tuesday, October 29, 2002


    Here and There

    Here and there nightfall
    without fanfare
    presses down, utterly
    expected, not an omen in sight.
    Here and there a husband
    at the usual time
    goes to bed with his wife
    and doesn't dream of other women.
    Occasionally a terrible sigh
    is heard, the kind that is
    theatrical, to be ignored.
    Or a car backfires
    and reminds us of a car
    backfiring, not of a gunshot.
    Here and there a man says
    what he means and people hear him
    and are not confused.
    Here and there a missing teenage girl
    comes home unscarred.
    Sometimes dawn just brings another
    day, full of minor
    pleasures and small complaints.
    And when the newspaper arrives
    with the world,
    people make kindling of it
    and sit together while it burns.


    "Here and There," by Stephen Dunn from New and Selected Poems (W.W. Norton).




No comments: