Ordinary Days by Stephen Dunn

The storm is over; too bad I say.
   At least storms are clear	
about their dangerous intent.

Ordinary days are what I fear, 	
   the sneaky speed
with which noon arrives, the sun

shining while a government darkens
   a decade, or a man
falls out of love.  I fear the solace

of repetition, a withheld slap in the face.
   Someone is singing	
in Portugal.  Here the mockingbird

is a crow and a grackle, then a cat.
   So many things	
happening at once.  If I decide

to turn over my desk, go privately wild,
   trash the house,
no one across town will know.

I must insist how disturbing this is—	
   the necessity 
of going public, of being a fool.

~ from New and Selected Poems, 1974-1994  
(W.W. Norton and Company, 1995)
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