Poetry in the Branches, A Training for Maine Librarians, June 13 & 14, Bangor Public Library, Presented by Maine Humanities Councl and Poets House
A Quiet Life
By Baron Wormser

What a person desires in life
     is a properly boiled egg.
This isn't as easy as it seems.
There must be gas and a stove,
     the gas requires pipelines, mastodon drills,
     banks that dispense the lozenge of capital.
There must be a pot, the product of mines
     and furnaces and factories,
     of dim early mornings and night-owl shifts,
     of women in kerchiefs and men with
     sweat-soaked hair.
Then water, the stuff of clouds and skies
     and God knows what causes it to happen.
There seems always too much or too little
     of it and more pipelines, meters, pumping
     stations, towers, tanks.
And salt - a miracle of the first order,
     the ace in any argument for God.
     Only God could have imagined from
     nothingness the pang of salt.
Political peace too. It should be quiet
     when one eats an egg. No political hoodlums
     knocking down doors, no lieutenants who are
     ticked off at their scheming girlfriends and
     take it out on you, no dictators
     posing as tribunes.
It should be quiet, so quiet you can hear
     the chicken, a creature usually mocked as a type
     of fool, a cluck chained to the chore of her body.
Listen, she is there, pecking at a bit of grain
     that came from nowhere.

 

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