Jack Grapes is an award-winning poet, playwright, actor, teacher, and the editor and publisher of ONTHEBUS, one of the top literary journals in the country. This poem is from Jack’s new book, The Naked Eye. Signed copies may be ordered directly from the poet here.
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SZYMBORSKA
I came home
 Wednesday night from class
 and Lori was ensconced
 like a caterpillar in a cocoon
 on the bed, watching a movie on tv
 about crazy people who fall in love
 and break china.
 “Szymborska died,” I said.
 She reached for the remote
 and shut the tv off.
 The room expanded
 into that quiet bubble we experience
 when we shut off the tv.
 She looked at me and said nothing.
 What was there to say?
 A friend dies, a poet dies, poetry lives on:
 There’s nothing you can say.
 It’s like turning off the tv,
 and their passing
 fills the space of our lives
 with all that silence.
 A balloon of being and nothingness,
 a reduction of existence
 into a series of appearances,
 overcoming those dualisms
 that have embarrassed philosophy
 and replacing them with the monism
 of the phenomenon.
 I put the clipboard
 I still had in my hand
 on the dresser
 and began to undress.
 Then I got in the bed
 and lay beside her.
 We still hadn’t spoken.
 Szymborska was gone.
 We just lay there for a bit,
 in the silence,
 not sure who would break it,
 not sure whose turn it was
 to turn the moment
 back into words.
 You need a poet
 at a time like this,
 and the poet was gone.
 There was a small crack in the ceiling.
 And a tiny cobweb in the corner.
 Later, Lori’d probably get on a chair
 and with a tissue
 wipe it away.
 That was her job,
 getting those little tiny spider webs
 gone before they engulfed the house,
 our lives, the planet. Don’t
 worry, dear reader, she’s on the job.
 You will be safe.
 “What’s my job?” asks Lori
 when she’s nagging me.
 And I repeat the mantra:
 “To take care of me.”
 But for now, with Szymborksa’s passing
 still blooming into silence,
 the cobweb
 would have to wait,
 the crack
 would just have to bide its time.
 Such a long silence.
 Then I thought, fuck it.
 I reached for the remote
 and clicked the tv back on.
 There went a teacup.
 Crash.
 There went another.
 Crash.
 It was good to get back
 to a semblance of the world,
 all that love and passion,
 all those broken teacups.
Wisława Szymborska, who died February 1, 2012, was a Polish poet who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1996.
We are proud to be premiering this poem today.
 
		