Friday, February 17, 2023

Hands in Poems: Billy Collins


Billy Collins

 I LOVE YOU


Early on, I noticed that you always say it

to each of your children

as you are getting off the phone with them

just as you never fail to say it

to me whenever we arrive at the end of a call.


It's all new to this only child.

I never heard my parents say it, 

at least not on such a regular basis,

nor did it ever occur to me to miss it.

To say I love you pretty much every day

 

would have seemed strangely obvious,

like saying I'm looking at you

when you are standing there looking at someone.

If my parents had started saying it 

a lot, I would have started to worry about them.

 

Of course, I always like hearing it from you.

That is never a cause for concern.

The problem is I now find myself saying it back

if only because just saying good-bye

then hanging up would make me seem discourteous.

 

But like Bartleby, I would prefer not to

say it so often, would prefer instead to save it

for special occasions, like shouting it out as I leaped 

into the red mouth of a volcano

with you standing helplessly on the smoking rim,

 

or while we are desperately clasping hands

before our plane plunges into the Gulf of Mexico,

which are only two of the examples I had in mind,

but enough, as it turns out, to make me

want to say it to you right now

 

and what better place than in the final couplet

of a poem where, as every student knows, it really counts.

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