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Posted by Linda Sue Grimes Aug 17, 2008 |
Kooser’s Commentary
Kooser introduces the poem: “I don't often talk about poetic forms in this column, thinking that most of my readers aren't interested in how the clock works and would rather be given the time. But the following poem by Veronica Patterson of Colorado has a subtitle referring to a form, the senryu, and I thought it might be helpful to mention that the senryu is a Japanese form similar to haiku but dealing with people rather than nature. There; enough said. Now you can forget the form and enjoy the poem, which is a beautiful sketch of a marriage.”
The Poem
The following is the first of the senryu sequence:
when I come late to bed
I move your leg flung over my side--
that warm gate
Please visit American Life in Poetry for the rest of this verse Column 172 .
Ted Kooser’s American Life in Poetry
While serving as the U. S. Poet Laureate 2004 to 2006, Nebraska poet Ted Kooser launched his series of weekly columns called American Life in Poetry. These columns are offered free to newspapers to dramatize the value and just plain fun of poetry and to demonstrate how poetry enhances life in America.