Thursday, August 16, 2007

A Live One

Cleaning out my school desk today I came across this poem that I had stashed for some appropriate moment down the road. Looks like that moment is now. I take away something different every time I read it.

The Room
by Stephen Dunn

The room has no choice.

Everything that’s spoken in it

it absorbs. And it must put up with


the bad flirt, the overly perfumed,

the many murderers of mood—

with whoever chooses to walk in.


If there’s a crowd, one person

is certain to be concealing a sadness,

another will have abandoned a dream,


at least one will be a special agent

for his own cause. And always

there’s a functionary,


somberly listing what he does.

The room plays no favorites.

Like its windows, it does nothing


but accommodate shades

of light and dark. After everyone leaves

(its entrance, of course, is an exit),


the room will need to be imagined

by someone, perhaps some me

walking away now, who comes alive


when most removed. He’ll know

from experience how deceptive

silence can be. This is when the walls


start to breathe as if reclaiming the air,

when the withheld spills forth,

when even the chairs start to talk.



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