My Australopithecus-self dumbfoundedly watches
my muse-self pirouette in a puddle and spill,
those unblemished legs flung every which way,
those bounteous breasts flopped like the dugs of a dog.
He tries, innocent thing, not to see, to have seen.
To evolve all this way and have beauty be ugly?
Is this what's meant by the modern?
It's worse than our old life as prey.
...And really, was the savannah so bad? Predators,
yes, but no TV, no malls. To eat: yum,
berries and bugs. Medium cyclic sex-drive.
Who needed a stunt-flying klutz of a muse?
Consider her point of view, though: without her,
that meagerly-minded ape-person can't even revise.
Imagine: life as first-draftup the hill, draft;
down the hill, draftdraft, draft, draft.
No wonder muse would lose interest,
no wonder wander. Work with a one-psychèd brute?
No wonder my room stinks like a sweat shop.
No wonder headaches, no wonder blank.
Plato was rightmadness to nail wings
on such a recalcitrant scamp.
He's half fossil anyway now.
Up the hill, down the hilljust let him be.
-
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