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THE ART OF POETRY
  

When I was a young poet I loved Philip Whalen's poems so much
that Philip Whalen became a hero in my heart
He also became a bald-headed Zen monk
But then years later I heard Philip Whalen in the flesh read his poems
He didn't read his poems like I thought he should
He didn't shout them with the holy energy that I thought they deserved
And he was surrounded by a reverent and hungry herd of dharma heirs
They were like mollusks on the side of an old ship
So I decided I didn't like Philip Whalen's poems so much after all
His poems slipped into my darkness
I went about writing my poems and trying to make a living
The years passed like a mountain
Sitting quietly in the desert wanting to be a mountain again
Then one morning I woke up and forgave Philip Whalen
He could read his poems any way he wanted
He could be a bald-headed Zen monk any way he wanted
Me, I was going to read the poems the way I wanted to
Because some of those poems are like heroes in my heart.

--Bobby Byrd

(published in Borderlands)

Pulsar
by Gene Frumkin

Poem For My 60th Birthday
by Dick Allen

Now That I Know What Feverfew Looks Like
by Elaine Equi

South America
by Tom Raworth

Words of Wisdom
by Mark Pawlak

The Art of Poetry
by Bobby Byrd

Some Anthropology
by Michael Heller

The Reality Executive
by James V. Cervantes

Those Sunday Afternoons
by Charles O. Hartman

The News from Mars
by Wendy Battin


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The Blue Moon Review/Blue Penny Quarterly, ISSN 1079-042x
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