POEM

Meditation on a Grapefruit

by Craig Arnold

To wake when all is possible
before the agitations of the day
have gripped you
                    To come to the kitchen
and peel a little basketball
for breakfast
              To tear the husk
like cotton padding        a cloud of oil
misting out of its pinprick pores
clean and sharp as pepper
                             To ease
each pale pink section out of its case
so carefully       without breaking
a single pearly cell
                    To slide each piece
into a cold blue china bowl
the juice pooling       until the whole
fruit is divided from its skin
and only then to eat
                  so sweet
                            a discipline
precisely pointless       a devout
involvement of the hands and senses
a pause     a little emptiness

each year harder to live within
each year harder to live without

This poem originally appeared in the October 2009 issue of Poetry.

October 2009 issue of Poetry Magazine

BUY THIS ISSUE »

 Craig  Arnold

Craig Arnold received his BA in English from Yale University and his PhD in creative writing . . . MORE »

More Poems by Craig Arnold

Incubus

Bird-Understander

Uncouplings

The Invisible Birds of Central America