  NJPoets Index Great NJ Poet's Portraits NJ Fiction NJ Reviews NJ Contest Winners NJPoets News Gioseffi.com PoetsUSA.com (Wise Women's Web) Italian American Writers.com NJ Past Events | | | | 3 POEMS by Stephen Dunn From New & Selected Poems 1974-1994 Essay on the Personal | Welcome | Because We Are Not Taken Seriously [Published by W.W. Norton, 500 Fifth Ave. N.Y. 10110. ISBN.0-393-03618-9, Copyrighted © 1994 by Stephen Dunn. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission of the author.] Stephen Dunn Biographical Note Essay on the Personal Because finally the personal is all that matters, we spend years describing stones, chairs, abandoned farmhouses-- until we're ready. Always it's a matter of precision, what it feels like to kiss someone or to walk out the door. How good it was to practice on stones which were things we could love without weeping over. How good someone else abandoned the farmhouse, bankrupt and desperate. Now we can bring a fine edge to our parents. We can hold hurt up to the sun for examination. But just when we think we have it, the personal goes the way of belief. What seemed so deep begins to seem naive, something that could be trusted because we hadn't read Plato or held two contradictory ideas or women in the same day. Love, then, becomes an old movie. Loss seems so common it belongs to the air, to breath itself, anyone's. We're left with style, a particular way of standing and saying, the idiosyncratic look at the frown which means nothing until we say it does. Years later, long after we believed it peculiar to ourselves, we return to love. We return to everything strange, inchoate, like living with someone, like living alone, settling for the partial, the almost satisfactory sense of it. Welcome if you believe nothing is always what's left after a while, as I did, If you believe you have this collection of ungiven gifts, as I do (right here behind the silence and the averted eyes) If you believe an afternoon can collapse into strange privacies- how in your backyard, for example, the shyness of flowers can be suddenly overwhelming, and in the distance the clear goddamn of thunder personal, like a voice, If you believe there's no correct response to death, as I do; that even in grief (where I've sat making plans) there are small corners of joy If your body sometimes is a light switch in a house of insomniacs If you can feel yourself straining to be yourself every waking minute If, as I am, you are almost smiling . . . Because We Are Not Taken Seriously Some night I wish they'd knock, on my door, the government men, looking for the poem of simple truths recited and whispered among the people. And when all I give them is silence and my children are exiled to the mountains, my wife forced to renounce me in public, I'll be the American poet whose loneliness, finally, is relevant, whose slightest movement ripples cross-country. And when the revolution frees me, its leaders wanting me to become "Poet of the Revolution," I'll refuse and keep a list of their terrible reprisals and all the dark things I love which they will abolish. With the ghost of Mandelstam on one shoulder, Lorca on the other, I'll write the next poem, the one that will ask only to be believed once it's in the air, singing. Copyright © 1994 by Stephen Dunn. All rights reserved. May be reprinted only by expressed permission of the author. [Back to Top] |