Come hither O Thou,is life not a song? -- E. E. Cummings, "Orientale I," Tulips & Chimneys
1. i lay the book down bookmark in place still shivering with possibilities still vibrant in the after- glow of literature's vitality words bloom like daffodils the white space around them the clay to reshape a living persona of the dead poet he populates the page like rain on fertile soil like pennies on the dollar hear him holler i am here his heart broad- casts his feelings his feelings broad- cast his voice
2. i sense e. e. ***- mings singing each chanson innocente each birth of spring each burden of love joyfully borne he is there in the sounds that echo in my skull that slither down my spine an anatomy of meaning that even the harshest critic cannot dissect muscle and bone united to lift the weight of puddles meant for jump- ing stretching to tie jump ropes into knots of playfulness still taut today
3. it is always spring in the dewy meadow it is always meadows that cushion the poet's fall o father how i've failed you how i set free the body that hypnotized the greeks that still shifts its weight in marble of oh so innocent white
4. the poem passes judgment on the pompous on repression's hosts not guilty are the children laughing and skipping past the latex meadows of the goat-footed balloonman who paws the mud like well a tied-up goat e. e. whistles a chanson from far and wee i lay the book down and whistle back the readerβs *chanson de merci