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Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Practice Growing Old

Posted by on May 16 at 10:59 AM

The great American poet Stanley Kunitz is dead. We are less without him.

Here’s his obituary if you want to know more about what he did in his 100-year life.

If you want to know more about who he was, you should buy this.

And take a moment to read the poem below.

Passing Through
—on my seventy-ninth birthday

Nobody in the widow’s household
ever celebrated anniversaries.
In the secrecy of my room
I would not admit I cared
that my friends were given parties.
Before I left town for school
my birthday went up in smoke
in a fire at City Hall that gutted
the Department of Vital Statistics.
If it weren’t for a census report
of a five-year-old White Male
sharing my mother’s address
at the Green Street tenement in Worcester
I’d have no documentary proof
that I exist. You are the first,
my dear, to bully me
into these festive occasions.

Sometimes, you say, I wear
an abstracted look that drives you
up the wall, as though it signified
distress or disaffection.
Don’t take it so to heart.
Maybe I enjoy not-being as much
as being who I am. Maybe
it’s time for me to practice
growing old. The way I look
at it, I’m passing through a phase:
gradually I’m changing to a word.
Whatever you choose to claim
of me is always yours:
nothing is truly mine
except my name. I only
borrowed this dust.

He was really something.


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Yesterday NPR played a clip of Kunitz reading "The Layers." The audio does not appear to be online, but at least the text of poem is:

http://www.npr.org/programs/atc/features/2001/mar/010330.kunitz.html

If you are human, you should read it.

my favorite. thank you stanley.

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