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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Billy Collins
Billy Collins
A former U.S. Poet Laureate, Billy Collins is the author of several books of poetry, including The Trouble with Poetry (2005); Nine Horses (2002); and Sailing Alone Around the Room: New and Selected Poems (2001)...
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FURTHER READING
Poems About Home
Home is so Sad
by Philip Larkin
My House, I Say
by Robert Louis Stevenson
On the Disadvantages of Central Heating
by Amy Clampitt
Te Deum
by Charles Reznikoff
The Cabbage
by Ruth Stone
The Lake Isle of Innisfree
by W. B. Yeats
This Is Just To Say
by William Carlos Williams
Poems About Sports
A Boy Juggling a Soccer Ball
by Christopher Merrill
Autumn Begins in Martins Ferry, Ohio
by James Wright
Baseball and Writing
by Marianne Moore
Casey at the Bat
by Ernest Lawrence Thayer
Days of Me
by Stuart Dischell
Séance at Tennis
by Dana Goodyear
To An Athlete Dying Young
by A. E. Housman
Poems for Summer
Alice at Seventeen: Like a Blind Child
by Darcy Cummings
Bed in Summer
by Robert Louis Stevenson
Fat Southern Men in Summer Suits
by Liam Rector
Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? (Sonnet 18)
by William Shakespeare
Summer Holiday
by Robinson Jeffers
They'll spend the summer
by Joshua Beckman
Related Prose
A Brisk Walk: Billy Collins in Conversation
by Joel Whitney and Billy Collins
Adopt a Poet | Add to Notebook | E-mail to Friend | Print
Fishing on the Susquehanna in July  
by Billy Collins

I have never been fishing on the Susquehanna
or on any river for that matter
to be perfectly honest.

Not in July or any month
have I had the pleasure--if it is a pleasure--
of fishing on the Susquehanna.

I am more likely to be found
in a quiet room like this one--
a painting of a woman on the wall,

a bowl of tangerines on the table--
trying to manufacture the sensation
of fishing on the Susquehanna.

There is little doubt
that others have been fishing
on the Susquehanna,

rowing upstream in a wooden boat,
sliding the oars under the water
then raising them to drip in the light.

But the nearest I have ever come to
fishing on the Susquehanna
was one afternoon in a museum in Philadelphia

when I balanced a little egg of time
in front of a painting
in which that river curled around a bend

under a blue cloud-ruffled sky,
dense trees along the banks,
and a fellow with a red bandanna

sitting in a small, green
flat-bottom boat
holding the thin whip of a pole.

That is something I am unlikely
ever to do, I remember
saying to myself and the person next to me.

Then I blinked and moved on
to other American scenes
of haystacks, water whitening over rocks,

even one of a brown hare
who seemed so wired with alertness
I imagined him springing right out of the frame.



From Picnic, Lightning by Billy Collins. Copyright © 1998 by Billy Collins. Reprinted by permission of the University of Pittsburgh Press. All rights reserved.
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