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October 2002
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Pegasus


Featured Poem
Rule


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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Pacemaker
by W. D. Snodgrass

 I

"One Snodgrass, two Snodgrass, three Snodgrass, four . . .
         I took my own rollcall when I counted seconds;
"One two three, Two two three, Three . . .," the drum score
         Showed only long rests to the tympani's entrance.

"Oh-oh-oh leff; leff; leff-toh-righ-toh-leff,"
         The sergeant cadenced us footsore recruits;
The heart, poor drummer, gone lame, deaf,
        Then awol, gets frogmarched to the noose.

 II

Old coots, at the Veterans', might catch breath
         If their cheeks got slapped by a nurse's aide,
Then come back to life; just so, at their birth,
         Young rumps had been tendered warm accolades.

The kick-ass rude attitude, smart-assed insult,
         The acid-fueled book review just might shock
Us back to the brawl like smelling salts,
         Might sting the lulled heart up off its blocks.

 III

I thought I'd always favor rubato
      Or syncopation, scorning fixed rhythms;
         Thought my old heartthrobs could stand up to stress;
Believed one's bloodpump should skip a few beats
      If it fell into company with sleek young women;
         Believed my own bruit could beat with the best.

Wrong again, Snodgrass! This new gold gadget,
      Snug as the watch on my wife's warm wrist,
         Drives my pulsetempo near twice its old pace—
Go, nonstop startwatch! Go, clockwork rabbit,
      Keeping this lame old dog synchronized,
         Steady, sparked up, still in the race.

 
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