Monday, October 29, 2012



Poetic Times
        For nikki[i]

Elated, I drive up the highway
to class, smiling.
My students—who I don’t own,
so I don’t know why I use the possessive—
see that poetry is not just a puzzling problem to perceive
the answer,
but an experience, a transformation, a view—when
then I approach an Amish farmer, plowing
with six rugged tan horses, three in a row,
he with a hat and focused ahead,
me and my cell phone focused abroad,
with the golden, red leaves spanning the horizon,
and his dog, marching beside,
and me speeding along a one-way highway.
I get to where I’m going,
and a student who teaches me says,
“Stop and Listen, and you may be able to understand
how to free
yourself
as well.”
                                                                   Lucia Elden 17 October 2012


[i] This poem is partly in response to nikki giovanni’s 1968 poem http://sbacari.tripod.com/poetry/forsaundra.htm  and also an online class discussion, including a quote from a student’s discussion forum post in response to a quote on freedom in “Sonny’s Blues” by James Baldwin