anting with Charles Simic

[image error]A lot of what makes poetry work is accumulation of meaning and possibility. In this week’s poem, “Solitude” by Charles Simic, the meaning begins with the phrase “first crumb” and how a crumb’s insignificance is gestured at before being subverted in the rest of the poem. It’s a move similar to starting zoomed out on something that appears one way from a distance, and turns out to be something completely different when you zoom in. In Simic’s characteristic style, there is both threat and snark in the final image, playing off ideas of solitude in an engaging way.


Solitude – Charles Simic


There now, where the first crumb

Falls from the table

You think no one hears it

As it hits the floor


But somewhere already

The ants are putting on

Their Quakers’ hats

And setting out to visit you.

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Published on February 08, 2019 08:24
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