It has been stamped with dispassionate blue ink, Signifying its future lack of suitability to sit on the shelves, Having been elbowed aside by this and that yearβs thing (And the book had not been checked out since the mid-seventies, Perhaps some young man all but short-circuited By the prospect of a bathing Julie Christie, Or some female counterpart shedding bell-bottomed tears Over doomed love, which, in her cosmology, All such things were fated to be) Placed in some temporary cardboard casket Which once held bananas or copier paper or ancient time cards, Sitting cheek to elbow with cookbooks, breathless biorhythm tomes, Buffeted about forces unseen and beyond its control As it faces the uncertain and uneasy prospect of possible reclamation.
This piece was inspired by, and can be read as a companion piece to, Lawrence Hall's "On an Inscription from Katya to Gary in a Pushkin Anthology Found in a Used Book Sale". Obviously, the good Lawrence is to be held blameless in any of the shortcomings of this effort.