“One reason to write a poem is to
flush from the deep thickets of the self some thought, feeling, comprehension,
question, music, you didn't know was in you, or in the world.” – Jane
Hirshfield
Born in New York on Feb. 24, 1953,
Hirshfield has authored 10 award-winning books of poetry. Her most recent is 2023’s The Asking: New
& Selected Poems. She also has done
a number of major translations and wrote or edited several collections of essays. For
Saturday’s Poem, here is Hirshfield’s,
A Person Protests to Fate
A person protests to fate:
"The things you have caused
me most to want
are those that furthest elude me."
Fate nods.
Fate is sympathetic.
To tie the shoes, button a shirt,
are triumphs
for only the very young,
the very old.
During the long middle:
conjugating a rivet
mastering tango
training the cat to stay off the table
preserving a single moment longer than this one
continuing to wake whatever has happened the day before
and the penmanships love practices inside the body.
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