Wallace Stevens On His Way To Work
He would leave early and walk slowly As if balancing books & nbsp; On the way to school, already expecting To be tardy once again and heavy With numbers, the unfashionably rounded & nbsp; Toes of his shoes invisible beyond The slope of his corporation. He would pause At his favorite fundamentally sound & nbsp; Park bench, which had been the birthplace Of paeans and ruminations on other mornings, And would turn his back to it, having gauged the distance & nbsp; Between his knees and the edge of the hardwood Almost invariably unoccupied At this enlightened hour by the bums of nighttime & nbsp; (For whom the owlish eye of the moon Had been closed by daylight), and would give himself wholly over Backwards and trustingly downwards & nbsp; And be well seated there. He would remove From his sinister jacket pocket a postcard And touch it and retouch it with the point & nbsp; Of the fountain he produced at his fingertips And fill it with his never-before-uttered Runes and obbligatos and pellucidly cryptic & nbsp; Duets from private pageants, from broken ends Of fandangos with the amoeba chaos chaos Couchant and rampant. Then he would rise & nbsp; With an effort as heartfelt as a decision To get out of bed on Sunday and carefully Relocate his center of gravity & nbsp; Above and beyond an imaginary axis Between his feet and carry the good news Along the path and the sidewalk, well on his way & nbsp; To readjusting the business of the earth.
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