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April 12, 2005

National Poetry Month: Billy Collins

Posted in: Poetry & Writing, Literature

For three years, I had the good fortune to teach English in the same department as Billy Collins. In all that time, I said nary a word to him (I was too shy). What a shame, huh?

Between 2001 and 2003, Billy Collins served as Poet Laureate of the United States. He is often touted as an “accessible” poet. His poetry does speak to a broad audience, but I often sense a sleight in that description, as if accessibility precluded seriousness or literary allusion, which it does not, at least in Collins’ skilled hands.

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Billy Collins

Duck/Rabbit

The lamb may lie down with the lion,
But they will never be as close as this pair
Who share the very lines
Of their existence, whose overlapping is their raison d’etre.
How strange and symbiotic the binds
That make one disappear
Whenever the other is spied.
Throw the duck a stare,
And the rabbit hops down his hole.
Give the rabbit the eye,
And the duck waddles off the folio.
Say, these could be our mascots, you and I –
        I could look at you forever
        And never see the two of us together.

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Japan

Today I pass the time reading
a favorite haiku,
saying the few words over and over.

It feels like eating
the same small, perfect grape
again and again.

I walk through the house reciting it
and leave its letters falling
through the air of every room.

I stand by the big silence of the piano and say it.
I say it in front of a painting of the sea.
I tap out its rhythm on an empty shelf.

I listen to myself saying it,
then I say it without listening,
then I hear it without saying it.

And when the dog looks up at me,
I kneel down on the floor
and whisper it into each of his long white ears.

It’s the one about the one-ton
temple bell
with the moth sleeping on its surface,

and every time I say it, I feel the excruciating
pressure of the moth
on the surface of the iron bell.

When I say it at the window,
the bell is the world
and I am the moth resting there.

When I say it into the mirror,
I am the heavy bell
and the moth is life with its papery wings.

And later, when I say it to you in the dark,
you are the bell,
and I am the tongue of the bell, ringing you,

and the moth has flown
from its line
and moves like a hinge in the air above our bed.

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