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I begin with the downward stroke of the letter I
that could equally be the word I
or as Monty Python observed of Thomas Hardy
settled on a chair at a table on his beloved moors
with pen poised and an air of tortured deliberation,
it could be the downward stroke of the letter T
with which so many books and poems have begun
or equally the downward stroke of the letter P or D
or even one of the downward strokes of the letter H
but I must insist, here it is the letter and word I
which contains everything within itself,
every story, every word, every deed, every thought,
every beginning and end because I am neither here
before or after, making I inevitable, immediate,
inviolable, irrefutable, I the library, I the vault,
I the stubbornness that brooks no argument,
I the prayer, I the lover, I the blessing and the curse,
I the question, I the answer,
I the narcissist, I both best and worst,
I the loneliness I cannot quench.
~~~~

David Adès’s books include Mapping the World and the chapbook Only the Questions Are Eternal. He lives in Sydney, Australia.
Copyright 2024 David Adès
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What a phenomenal poem! I will be sharing this with poetry students! Love the Hardy reference. Love the whole thing.
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David is inspired in his vision and original in his craft.
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Thanks so much, Meg!
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And the loneliness of so many I’s, trying to see beyond.
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Yes, the loneliness of the narcissist.
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We live in a narcissistic society. It is normal to start every conversation, every utterance with the word I. This poem holds that attitude up to the light.
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We all live in I world; 8 billon I worlds drifting, chasing, tearing, sleeping behind our cataracted perceptions. Thanks for this reminder.
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Thanks, Leo.
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”I the loneliness I cannot quench.”
This is wonderful alphabet of being. Thank you so much!
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Yes, the last line.
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