home


ee cummings:
i thank You
somewhere i have never travelled
in Just-

Thomas Centolella:
Misterioso

Louise Gluck:
Formaggio

Jane Kenyon:
Happiness
Otherwise
Learning in the First Grade

Bukowski:
One for old snaggletooth
i met a genius
the worst and the best

Nikki Giovanni:
Photography

Mary Oliver:
Mindful

Leonard Cohen:
Interview

George Eliot:
Middlemarch

Margaret Atwood:
Sleep

Borges:
Ajedrez
La escritura del dios

Rebecca Seiferle:
Seraphim

ntozake shange:
no assistance

Pablo Neruda:
Book of Questions XIV

Billy Collins:
Litany

Nora Ephron:
Remarks to Wellesley College Class of 1996

Arundhati Roy:
Buy One, Get One Free

George Packer:
The Way We Live Now

Carl Mayer:
The pile theory


tenets

parables
     

Bukowski - One for old snaggletooth

I know a woman
who keeps buying puzzles
chinese
puzzles
blocks
wires
pieces that finally fit
into some order.
she works it out
mathmatically
she solves all her
puzzles
lives down by the sea
puts sugar out for the ants
and believes
ultimately
in a better world.
her hair is white
she seldom combs it
her teeth are snaggled
and she wears loose shapeless
coveralls over a body most
women would wish they had.
for many years she irritated me
with what I considered her
eccentricities-
like soaking eggshells in water
(to feed the plants so that
they'd get calcium).
but finally when I think of her
life
and compare it to other lives
more dazzling, original
and beautiful
I realize that she has hurt fewer
people than anybody I know
(and by hurt I simply mean hurt).
she has had some terrible times,
times when maybe I should have
helped her more
for she is the mother of my only
child
and we were once great lovers,
but she has come through
like I said
she has hurt fewer people than
anybody I know,
and if you look at it like that,
well,
she has created a better world.
she has won.

Frances, this poem is for
you.