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wonga's filmblog

  • The Movies (a poem)

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    okay, so April is national poetry month or something and i thought i'd share the following poem about the movies that landed in my inbox today courtesy of The Writer's Almanac with Garrison Keillor.

    Poem: "The Movies" by Billy Collins from Sailing Alone Around the Room: New and Selected Poems. © Random House. Reprinted with permission.

    The Movies
    I would like to watch a movie tonight
    in which a stranger rides into town
    or where someone embarks on a long journey,

    a movie with the promise of danger,
    danger visited upon the citizens of the town
    by the stranger who rides in,

    or the danger that will befall the person
    on his or her long hazardous journey—
    it hardly matters to me

    so long as I am not in danger,
    and not much danger lies in watching
    a movie, you might as well agree.

    I would prefer to watch this movie at home
    than walk out in the cold to a theater
    and stand on line for a ticket.

    I want to watch it lying down
    with the bed hitched up to the television
    the way they'd hitch up a stagecoach

    to a team of horses
    so the movie could pull me along
    the crooked, dusty road of its adventures.

    I would stay out of harm's way
    by identifying with the characters
    like the bartender in the movie about the stranger

    who rides into town,
    the fellow who knows enough to duck
    when a chair shatters the mirror over the bar.

    Or the stationmaster
    in the movie about the perilous journey,
    the fellow who fishes a gold watch from his pocket,

    helps a lady onto the train,
    and hands up a heavy satchel
    to the man with the mustache

    and the dangerous eyes,
    waving the all-clear to the engineer.
    Then the train would pull out of the station

    and the movie would continue without me.
    And at the end of the day
    I would hang up my oval hat on a hook

    and take the shortcut home to my two dogs,
    my faithful, amorous wife, and my children—
    Molly, Lucinda, and Harold, Jr.


 


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