The Something

Charles Simic

 
Here come my night thoughts
On crutches,
Returning from studying the heavens.
What they thought about
Stayed the same,
Stayed immense and incomprehensible.
My mother and father smile at each other
Knowingly above the mantel.
The cat sleeps on, the dog
Growls in his sleep.
The stove is cold and so is the bed.
Now there are only these crutches
To contend with.
Go ahead and laugh, while I raise one
With difficulty,
Swaying on the front porch,
While pointing at something
In the gray distance.
You see nothing, eh?
Neither do I, Mr. Milkman.
I better hit you once or twice over the head
With this fine old prop,
So you don't go off muttering
I saw something!
 
From Walking the Black Cat, published by Harcourt Brace & Company, 1996. Copyright © 1996 by Charles Simic. All rights reserved. Used by permission of the author.

Poems by This Author

Country Fair by Charles Simic
If you didn't see the six-legged dog,
Eyes Fastened With Pins by Charles Simic
How much death works,
In the Library by Charles Simic
There's a book called
Late September by Charles Simic
The mail truck goes down the coast
My Shoes by Charles Simic
Shoes, secret face of my inner life
On this Very Street in Belgrade by Charles Simic
Pigeons at Dawn by Charles Simic
Extraordinary efforts are being made
Read Your Fate by Charles Simic
A world's disappearing.
Riddle by Charles Simic
Secret History by Charles Simic
Of the light in my room
The Initiate by Charles Simic
St. John of the Cross wore dark glasses
The White Room by Charles Simic
The obvious is difficult
This Morning by Charles Simic
Enter without knocking, hard-working ant.
Watermelons by Charles Simic
Green Buddhas


Further Reading

Related Poems
If There Is Something to Desire, 9, 17, 18
by Vera Pavlova