I Remember
Galileo
I remember Galileo
describing the mind
as a piece of paper blown around by the wind,
and I
loved the sight of it sticking to a tree,
or jumping into the backseat of a
car,
and for years I watched paper leap through my cities;
but yesterday
I saw the mind was a squirrel caught crossing
Route 80 between the wheels of
a giant truck,
dancing back and forth like a thin leaf,
or a frightened
string, for only two seconds living
on the white concrete before he got
away,
his life shortened by all that terror, his head
jerking, his yellow
teeth ground down to dust.
It was the speed of the
squirrel and his lowness to the ground,
his great purpose and the alertness
of his dancing,
that showed me the difference between him and paper.
Paper
will do in theory, when there is time
to sit back in a metal chair and study
shadows;
but for this life I need a squirrel,
his clawed feet spread, his
whole soul quivering,
the loud noise shaking him from head to tail.
O philosophical mind, O mind of paper, I need a squirrel
finishing his wild
dash across the highway,
rushing up his green ungoverned
hillside.
~ Gerald Stern
~
(This Time: New and Selected
Poems)
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