The trouble with poetry, I realized  
  as I walked along a beach one night --  
  cold Florida sand under my bare feet,  
  a show of stars in the sky -- 
  the trouble with poetry is  
 that it encourages the writing of more poetry,  
 more guppies crowding the fish tank,  
 more baby rabbits  
 hopping out of their mothers into the dewy grass.  
  And how will it ever end?  
 unless the day finally arrives  
 when we have compared everything in the world  
 to everything else in the world,  
  and there is nothing left to do  
 but quietly close our notebooks  
 and sit with our hands folded on our desks. 
  Poetry fills me with joy  
 and I rise like a feather in the wind.  
 Poetry fills me with sorrow  
 and I sink like a chain flung from a bridge. 
  But mostly poetry fills me  
 with the urge to write poetry,  
 to sit in the dark and wait for a little flame  
 to appear at the tip of my pencil. 
  And along with that, the longing to steal,  
 to break into the poems of others  
 with a flashlight and a ski mask. 
  And what an unmerry band of thieves we are,  
 cut-purses, common shoplifters,  
 I thought to myself  
 as a cold wave swirled around my feet  
 and the lighthouse moved its megaphone over the sea,  
 which is an image I stole directly  
 from Lawrence Ferlinghetti --  
 to be perfectly honest for a moment -- 
  the bicycling poet of San Francisco  
 whose little amusement park of a book  
 I carried in a side pocket of my uniform  
 up and down the treacherous halls of high school. 
 
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