WHERE ART IS A MIDWIFE By Tom Paulin
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In the third decade of March,
A Tuesday in the town of Z--
The censors are on day-release.
They must learn about literature.
There are things called ironies,
Also symbols, which carry meaning.
The types of ambiguity
Are as numerous as the enemies
Of the state. Formal and bourgeois,
Sonnets sing of the old order,
Its lost gardens where white ladies
Are served wine in the subtle shade.
This poem about a bear
Is not a poem about a bear.
It may be termed a satire
On a loyal friend. Do I need
To spell it out? Is it possible
That none of you can understand?
From “Scanning the Century: The Penguin Book of the Twentieth Century in Poetry,” edited by Peter Forbes (Penguin UK: 596 pp., $22.95)
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