It was destined to end someday
so why not bow out now, gracefully,
close enough to the top of your game
to remember what was like? It was,
after all, a lot like lifegood at times,
better at others, often disappointing,
on all-too-rare occasions, unforgettable.
Pretty girls had sat on various parts of you
so what if they were pleasuring themselves
elsewhere now? What lay ahead, after all,
were failed performances enhanced
by pharmaceuticals, polite handshakes
after a straight-set defeat. Did you really
need to go out in such operatic fashion, like
Nelson Rockefeller (who, the joke goes, came
and went at the same time), or Leonard Warren
in Il Forza del Destino? Why, you'd had your day
auf der Bühne, as the Germans say, a better one
than most, and now, whether it was stage door left
or right you exited from, it hardly mattered: Birds
had been in your hand once, and now, no pun
intended, were off somewhere in a bush. And
what was wrong with that? Let be be finale of seem,
Stevens said, and why not? You'd already made
your living will: No heroic measures of any kind.
So, girls, take your hands off the old boy's knees:
it'll get you nowhere. Silence may be golden
for the flesh as well. He's happy just to be here,
singing a little song of his own ("No Regrets").
So kiss him one last time, tenderly. And if there's
no heavy breathing in its wake, so be it, and let it
be, and let it have been, and let, if it must, that
sometimes beautiful something never come again.
-
Winter Feature 2010
-
Feature
- Poets in Person An HD video visit with Stephen Dunn in Frostburg, MD
-
Poetry
- Jonathan Aaron
- Michael Blumenthal
- Billy Collins
- Philip Dacey
- Carl Dennis
- Gregory Djanikian
- Stephen Dobyns
- Stephen Dunn
- B.H. Fairchild
- Kathleen Graber
- Jane Hirshfield
- Tony Hoagland
- Dorianne Laux
- Thomas Lux
- D. Nurkse
- Alicia Ostriker
- Lawrence Raab
- J. Allyn Rosser
- Dave Smith
- Gerald Stern
- Ellen Bryant Voigt
- C.K. Williams
- Robert Wrigley
-
Essay
- Gregory Djanikian Stephen Dunn's Compositional Strategies: Verse And Reverse
- David Rigsbee The Despoiled And Radiant Now: Ambivalence And Secrets In Stephen Dunn
-
Book Review
- David Rigsbee reviews Here and Now: Poems
by Stephen Dunn
- David Rigsbee reviews Here and Now: Poems