just thought you’d like to know,
that you’re eleventh on the Top Poets list
as of today (though I should mention
that the hittership is 75% from
the New World that you just foresaw
before you ‘closed your book’; not
that that’s relevant – they speak an
English, isn’t that great, which is nearer
to your own sound than the strangled
glottal stops of Cheapside Thames-side these sorry days) …
So to the list: and so you’ll understand
that no offence is meant, etcetera…
top dog today is Sheldon Silverstein –
the sort of oddball who lives down the street
just where the sidewalk ends,
whom your children hang around with all the time –
they loved his poetry when they were kids,
and still love him now they’re all grown-up
for what he brought to their childhood – I bet
you wrote some poems like that for your kids
but never got them published? So I know
that though my fellow poets sniff,
you’ll grant him – love?
The second is a curious case –
you may know him as Nuftali Basoalto,
we know him now as Pablo Neruda –
and though he wrote in Spanish
(they didn’t conquer England but
did rather well on Americ’s southern shores)
you’ll recognise him even in translation
as a fellow poet, worldwide in his heart…
The third is Maya Angelou – now, no-one
wrote more deeply about women than you did,
and of the human spirit:
so though our fellow poets and critics sniff once more,
she is Woman in Splendour,
Woman as Survivor – so,
remembering your Mistress Quickly and her merry mates,
you’ll recognise her instantly for what she is?
majesty – thy name is woman…
The fourth is Langston Hughes – a bit of history here:
the human spirit under great duress,
unvanquished – and if this may oft confine
the poet’s wordwide scope, may yet sing loud
the human heart and speak
to generations yet unborn
of spirit tested, hope undimmed
and tears.. and tears…and love.
Emily Dickinson, the fifth – I guess
you may well need to read her twice –
her punctuation’s not so – breathless –
as she may seem; neglected in her day,
she speaks out of obscurity to the human heart;
she’s earned her place, wouldn’t you say?
Robert Frost, the sixth – you may find him
as austere as his wintry and keen-fingered name;
like frost, he touches all the countryside;
secure as Jonson, shall we say, in poetry’s ear?
Seventh and ninth – let’s put them back together –
frail Sylvia Plath and gaunt Ted Hughes, the star-crossed,
storm-tossed, heart-locked, lovelost lovers –
oh, you who know what passion’s spent,
what hearts are wrung, for poetry’s salt tears,
admire, despair, their planetary pact
eternal writ among the unrhymed stars…
Which leaves just wild Bukowski, raven Poe
to speak as Marlowe, Webster most of all,
as do your own black tragedies,
of those dark places of the human soul
from which emerges all that’s truly clear and bright –
and then yourself…
and there is much to say
of Whitman, Sharpe, Palutsky, Dahl,
all widely read, and following on your heels;
in whom, as you, the heart’s as great as this great world itself;
and darkest night smiled on by clearest day;
statistics, poets say, have much, have nothing, yet to answer for –
and so, eternal Will – I wish you God’s good day!