Sunday, April 30, 2006

Richard Newman: Coins (You'll empty your pocket and take a look).


American Life in Poetry: Column 057

BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE

Midwestern poet Richard Newman traces the imaginary life of coins as a connection between people. The coins—seemingly of little value—become a ceremonial and communal currency.



Coins

My change: a nickel caked with finger grime;
two nicked quarters not long for this life, worth
more for keeping dead eyes shut than bus fare;
a dime, shining in sunshine like a new dime;
grubby pennies, one stamped the year of my birth,
no brighter than I from 40 years of wear.

What purses, piggy banks, and window sills
have these coins known, their presidential heads
pinched into what beggar's chalky palm—
they circulate like tarnished red blood cells,
all of us exchanging the merest film
of our lives, and the lives of those long dead.

And now my turn in the convenience store,
I hand over my fist of change, still warm,
to the bored, lip-pierced check-out girl, once more
to be spun down cigarette machines, hurled
in fountains, flipped for luck—these dirty charms
chiming in the dark pockets of the world.

Reprinted from "Borrowed Towns," Word Press, 2005, by permission of the author. First printed in "Crab Orchard Review," Volume 10, No. 1, 2005. Copyright © 2005 by Richard Newman. This weekly column is supported by The Poetry Foundation, The Library of Congress, and the Department of English at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. This column does not accept unsolicited poetry.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great poem! I too have looked at coins and had similar thoughts, though not quite so eloquent.

"these dirty charms
chiming in the dark pockets of the world."

Beautiful.

Hey Johnny - do you ever put local poets on here? I know there are several. I've heard them read at a meeting of Southwest Writers

Peg

johnny_mango said...

Good idea Peg! If any local poets want to email a short poem, picture, and maybe a link to something about them, I'll do it.

What about a "local poet" feature once a week? Any interest?

Anonymous said...

Johnny- SouthWest Writers has a monthly publication, The SouthWest Sage, in which there's an announcement section. That would be a perfect place to recruit poets for a weekly local poet feature. Send an announcement to SWWriters@juno.com, 60 words or less, and it will go in the next issue. It's published online as well. (see their website for an example)

Peg