Making It Look Easy
July 12, 2019Photo by Ana Tavares on Unsplash |
Introduction by
Ted Kooser: There’s nothing that can’t be a good subject for a poem. The
hard part is to capture something in such a way that it becomes engaging and
meaningful. Here's a poem from the Summer 2018 issue of Rattle, by
Peg Duthie of Tennessee, in which two very different experiences are pushed up
side by side. Her most recent book of poetry is Measured Extravagance,
(Upper Rubber Boot, 2012).
Decorating a Cake While Listening to Tennis
The commentator’s rabbiting on and on
about how it’s so easy for Roger, resentment
thick as butter still in a box. Yet word
from those who've done their homework
is how the man loves to train—how much
he relishes putting in the hours
just as magicians shuffle card after card,
countless to mere humans
but carefully all accounted for.
At hearing “luck” again, I stop
until my hands relax their clutch
on the cone from which a dozen more
peonies are to materialize. I make it look easy
to grow a garden on top of a sheet
of fondant, and that’s how it should appear:
as natural and as meant-to-be
as the spin of a ball from the sweetest spot
of a racquet whisked through the air like a wand.
about how it’s so easy for Roger, resentment
thick as butter still in a box. Yet word
from those who've done their homework
is how the man loves to train—how much
he relishes putting in the hours
just as magicians shuffle card after card,
countless to mere humans
but carefully all accounted for.
At hearing “luck” again, I stop
until my hands relax their clutch
on the cone from which a dozen more
peonies are to materialize. I make it look easy
to grow a garden on top of a sheet
of fondant, and that’s how it should appear:
as natural and as meant-to-be
as the spin of a ball from the sweetest spot
of a racquet whisked through the air like a wand.
We do not accept
unsolicited submissions. American Life in Poetry is made possible by The
Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org), publisher of Poetry magazine.
It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2018 by Peg Duthie, “Decorating a Cake While
Listening to Tennis,” from Rattle, (Vol. 24, No. 2, 2018). Poem
reprinted by permission of Peg Duthie and the publisher. Introduction copyright
© 2019 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction's author, Ted Kooser, served
as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress
from 2004-2006.
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