Thursday, June 25, 2015

Just when it has seemed I couldn’t bear
one more friend
waking with a tumor, one more maniac


with a perfect reason, often a sweetness
has come
and changed nothing in the world


except the way I stumbled through it,
for a while lost
in the ignorance of loving


someone or something, the world shrunk
to mouth-size,
hand-size, and never seeming small.


I acknowledge there is no sweetness
that doesn’t leave a stain,
no sweetness that’s ever sufficiently sweet.


Tonight a friend called to say his lover
was killed in a car
he was driving. His voice was low


and guttural, he repeated what he needed
to repeat, and I repeated
the one or two words we have for such grief


until we were speaking only in tones.
Often a sweetness comes
as if on loan, stays just long enough


to make sense of what it means to be alive,
then returns to its dark
source. As for me, I don’t care


where it’s been, or what bitter road
it’s traveled
to come so far, to taste so good.


"Sweetness" by Stephen Dunn from New and Selected Poems. © Norton, 1994.

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