Robert PinskyPinsky: “The longer I live, the more I see there’s something about reciting rhythmical words aloud — it’s almost biological — that comforts and enlivens human beings.” (via Garrison Keillor)
First Things to Hand
by Robert PinskyIn the skull kept on the desk.
In the spider-pod in the dust.Or nowhere. In milkmaids, in loaves,
Or nowhere. And if Socrates leavesHis house in the morning,
When he returns in the eveningHe will find Socrates waiting
On the doorstep. Buddha the stickYou use to clear the path,
And Buddha the dog-doo you flickAway with it, nowhere or in each
Several thing you touch:The dollar bill, the button
That works the television.Even in the joke, the three
Words American men sayAfter making love. Where’s
The remote? In the tearsIn things, proximate, intimate.
In the wired stem with rootAnd leaf nowhere of this lamp:
Brass base, aura of illumination,Enlightenment, shade of grief.
Odor of the lamp, brazen.The mind waiting in the mind
As in the first thing to hand.
