poetry book
Give up
sitting dutifully at your desk. Leave
your house
or apartment. Go out into the world.
It's all
right to carry a notebook but a cheap
one is best,
with pages the color of weak tea
and on the
front a kitten or a space ship.
Avoid any
enclosed space where more than
three people
are wearing turtlenecks. Beware
any
snow-covered chalet with deer tracks
across the
muffled tennis courts.
Not
surprisingly, libraries are a good place to write.
And the
perfect place in a library is near an aisle
where a
child a year or two old is playing as his
mother
browses the ranks of the dead.
Often he
will pull books from the bottom shelf.
The title,
the author's name, the brooding photo
on the flap
mean nothing. Red book on black, gray
book on
brown, he builds a tower. And the higher
it gets, the
wider he grins.
You who
asked for advice, listen: When the tower
falls, be
like that child. Laugh so loud everybody
in the world
frowns and says, "Shhhh."
Then start
again.