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FURTHER READING
Poems by Nathaniel Bellows
Russian Birch
Poems about City Life
And the City Stood in its Brightness
by Czeslaw Milosz
Atlantic City Sunday Morning
by Gregory Pardlo
Block City
by Robert Louis Stevenson
California Plush
by Frank Bidart
He Dreams of Falling
by Ruth Ellen Kocher
In a Station of the Metro
by Ezra Pound
In Paris
by Carl Dennis
Pittsburgh
by James Allen Hall
The Chicago Poem
by Jerome Rothenberg
The City Limits
by A. R. Ammons
The City's Love
by Claude McKay
This City
by Liam Rector
With My Back to City Hall, On Yom Kippur
by Jordan Davis
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Move to the City

 
by Nathaniel Bellows

live life as a stranger. Disappear
into frequent invention, depending
on the district, wherever you get off
the train. For a night, take the name
of the person who’d say yes to that
offer, that overture, the invitation to
kiss that mouth, sit on that lap. Assume
the name of whoever has the skill to
slip from the warm side of the sleeping
stranger, dress in the hallway of the
hotel. This is a city where people
know the price of everything, and
know that some of the best things
still come free. In one guise: shed
all that shame. In another: flaunt the
plumage you’ve never allowed
yourself to leverage. Danger will
always be outweighed by education,
even if conjured by a lie. Remember:
go home while it’s still dark. Don’t
invite anyone back. And, once inside,
take off the mask. These inventions
are the art of a kind of citizenship,
and they do not last. In the end, it
might mean nothing beyond further
fortifying the walls, crystallizing
the questioned, tested autonomy,
ratifying the fact that nothing will be
as secret, as satisfying, as the work
you do alone in your room.
About this poem:

"What can one learn from anonymity? Freedom, flexibility, invention, the chance to know who you are by acting out who you may not be. There is a lot to be gained from participating in the world around you, from engagement. This poem is an homage to the art of autonomy."

—Nathaniel Bellows






Copyright © 2013 by Nathaniel Bellows. Used with permission of the author. This poem appeared in Poem-A-Day on August 5, 2013. Browse the Poem-A-Day archive.
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