Poetry Founded in 1912 by Harriet Monroe
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W. D. Snodgrass won the Pulitzer Prize in 1960. His most recent volume of poetry is Each in His Season (BOA, 1993), and his most recent critical books are To Sound Like Yourself (BOA, 2002) and De/Compositions: 101 Good Poems Gone Wrong (Graywolf, 2000).

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Who Steals My Good Name
by W. D. Snodgrass

For the person who obtained my debit cardnumber and spent $11,000 in five days

My pale stepdaughter, just off the school bus,
Scowled, "Well, that's the last time I say my name's
Snodgrass!" Just so, may that anonymous
Mexican male who prodigally claims

My clan lines, identity and the sixteen
Digits that unlock my bank account,
Think twice. That less than proper name's been
Taken by three ex-wives, each for an amount

Past all you've squandered, each more than pleased
To change it back. That surname you affect
May have more consequence than getting teased
By dumb kids or tracked down by bank detectives.

Don't underrate its history: one of ours played
Piano on his prison's weekly broadcast;
One got rich on a scammed quiz show; one made
A bungle costing the World Series. My own past

Could subject you to guilt by association:
If you write anything more than false checks,
Abandon all hope of large press publication
Or prizes—critics shun the name like sex
Without a condom. Whoever steals my purse
Helps chain me to my writing desk again
For fun and profit. So take thanks with my curse:
May your pen name help send you to your pen.

 
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