HOME
BOOKING INFO
MAILING LISTS
URBANA POETRY SLAM
POEM TEXTS
ONLINE STORE
GIG CALENDAR
PHOTO ALBUM
WORKSHOPS I TEACH
SEEKING PERMISSION
PAGE MEETS STAGE
JOURNAL BLOG
WHO IS TAYLOR MALI?
NOTEWORTHY EVENTS
PODCASTS
BLURBS & TESTIMONIALS
"WHAT TEACHERS MAKE"
WHO WAS JIM FLORA?
POEM VIDEOS
PROMO MATERIAL
INTRODUCTION CUE CARD
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
QUEST FOR 1,000 TEACHERS
CONTACT INFO

  Undivided attention 

Printable Version

Undivided attention
By Taylor Mali
www.taylormali.com

A grand piano wrapped in quilted pads by movers,
tied up with canvas straps - like classical music's
birthday gift to the insane -
is gently nudged without its legs
out an eighth-floor window on 62nd street.

It dangles in April air from the neck of the movers' crane,
Chopin-shiny black lacquer squares
and dirty white crisscross patterns hanging like the second-to-last
note of a concerto played on the edge of the seat,
the edge of tears, the edge of eight stories up going over, and
I'm trying to teach math in the building across the street.

Who can teach when there are such lessons to be learned?
All the greatest common factors are delivered by
long-necked cranes and flatbed trucks
or come through everything, even air.
Like snow.

See, snow falls for the first time every year, and every year
my students rush to the window
as if snow were more interesting than math,
which, of course, it is.

So please.

Let me teach like a Steinway,
spinning slowly in April air,
so almost-falling, so hinderingly
dangling from the neck of the movers' crane.
So on the edge of losing everything.

Let me teach like the first snow, falling.

<< Back To Poems On-Line



Printable Version

Copyright © 2009 - Taylor Mali - All Rights Reserved


Designed and Hosted By GridSouth Networks, LLC