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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

American life in poetry

Ted Kooser U.S. Poet Laureate, 2004-2006

A large white umbrella blown into the street, and an aproned waiter rushing to the rescue. A poem need not have a big subject, but what’s there does need to add up to more than the surface details.

Notice the way this poem by Mike White of Utah moves beyond realistic description into another, deeper realm of suggestion.

Wind

Not a remarkable wind.

So when the bistro’s patio umbrella

blew suddenly free and pitched

into the middle of the road,

it put a stop to the afternoon.

Something white and amazing

was blocking the way.

A waiter in a clean apron

appeared, not quite

certain, shielding his eyes, wary

of our rumbling engines.

He knelt in the hot road,

making two figures in white, one

leaning over the sprawled,

broken shape of the other,

creaturely, great-winged,

and now so carefully gathered in.