(for Elizabeth Bishop)
One day you said to me,
 “there’s nothing you can do,”
 and recited Auden’s line:
 “Poetry makes nothing happen.”
 Although I honor your pinched music,
 the poems you dipped in light,
 those pulsing like a rainbow
 before slipping from our sight,
 I wanted to ask you why
 several dives out of the self,
 a sweet woman’s open caress,
 a hundred books with stories
 gyrating with people and places
 never diminished my confusion.
 You did agree that at least
 Old Socrates was right
 in telling his Athenian friends
 that governments are only that—
 a person with many heads
 that cannot think as one.
 History will go on showing
 them swing from peace
 to war and back again,
 in one wide gallows-sweep
 just as the pendulum
 of the world’s clocks
 returns its towns to craters.
 Fifteen cobalt-blue years later,
 I must ask myself, if the dust
 and rubble of each new war
 that settles in our bones
 and deadens a generation,
 are little more than negatives
 of the Kennedys, King and Lennon,
 has less weight than what
 we felt the day the Apollo spaceship
 landed on the moon,
 and Auden’s line is true,
 then why did you til your last breath,
 sing into your ruin?





















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