Madmen by Billy Collins

I’m trying very hard not to give in to the temptation to turn the PotD into the ESVM Sonnet of the Day.

Madmen
By Billy Collins

They say you can jinx a poem
if you talk about it before it is done.
If you let it out too early, they warn,
your poem will fly away,
and this time they are absolutely right.

Take the night I mentioned to you
I wanted to write about the madmen,
as the newspapers so blithely call them,
who attack art, not in reviews,
but with breadknives and hammers
in the quiet museums of Prague and Amsterdam.

   Actually, they are the real artists,
you said, spinning the ice in your glass.
The screwdriver is their brush.
The real vandals are the restorers,
you went on, slowly turning me upside-down,
the ones in the white doctor’s smocks
who close the wound in the landscape,
and thus ruin the true art of the mad.

I watched my poem fly down to the front
of the bar and hover there
until the next customer walked in—
then I watched it fly out the open door into the night
and sail away, I could only imagine,
over the dark tenements of the city.

All I had wished to say
was that art was also short,
as a razor can teach with a slash or two,
that it only seems long compared to life,
but that night, I drove home alone
with nothing swinging in the cage of my heart
except the faint hope that I might
catch a glimpse of the thing
in the fan of my headlights,
maybe perched on a road sign or a street lamp,
poor unwritten bird, its wings folded,
staring down at me with tiny illuminated eyes.

1 comment:

  1. Doug, 22. January 2010, 23:11

    Well, if you’re trying to avoid a string of ESVM, you could always go to her contemporary, Sara Teasdale! Less well known, I’d say her heart burnt at two ends, not her candle: she married for security, not the poet she equally loved. And she did not last the night: a (likely intentional) overdose of pills. But she remains one of my favorite poets.

    Her poem ‘Jewels’ has been haunting me recently, a fine poem to read when reminiscing late at night about star-crossed love.

    Jewels
    (Sara Teasdale)

    If I should see your eyes again,
    I know how far their look would go –
    Back to a morning in the park
    With sapphire shadows on the snow.

    Or back to oak trees in the spring
    When you unloosed my hair and kissed
    The head that lay against your knees
    In the leaf shadow’s amethyst.

    And still another shining place
    We would remember — how the dun
    Wild mountain held us on its crest
    One diamond morning white with sun.

    But I will turn my eyes from you
    As women turn to put away
    The jewels they have worn at night
    And cannot wear in sober day.

     

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