pages tagged adulationPhilowixianhttp://www.columbia.edu/cu/philo/tags/adulation/Philowixianikiwiki2012-12-12T07:00:31Zone of my favorite love poemshttp://www.columbia.edu/cu/philo/phlog/2008/02/one-of-my-favorite-love-poems/2008-02-15T04:02:00Z2008-02-15T04:02:00Z
perhaps a less conventional love poem than most...<br /><br />"Marginalia"<br /><br />Sometimes the notes are ferocious,<br />skirmishes against the author<br />raging along the borders of every page<br />in tiny black script.<br />If I could just get my hands on you,<br />Kierkegaard, or Conor Cruise O'Brien,<br />they seem to say,<br />I would bolt the door and beat some logic into your head.<br /><br />Other comments are more offhand, dismissive -<br />"Nonsense." "Please!" "HA!!" -<br />that kind of thing.<br />I remember once looking up from my reading,<br />my thumb as a bookmark,<br />trying to imagine what the person must look like<br />why wrote "Don't be a ninny"<br />alongside a paragraph in The Life of Emily Dickinson.<br /><br />Students are more modest<br />needing to leave only their splayed footprints<br />along the shore of the page.<br />One scrawls "Metaphor" next to a stanza of Eliot's.<br />Another notes the presence of "Irony"<br />fifty times outside the paragraphs of A Modest Proposal.<br /><br />Or they are fans who cheer from the empty bleachers,<br />Hands cupped around their mouths.<br />"Absolutely," they shout<br />to Duns Scotus and James Baldwin.<br />"Yes." "Bull's-eye." "My man!"<br />Check marks, asterisks, and exclamation points<br />rain down along the sidelines.<br /><br />And if you have managed to graduate from college<br />without ever having written "Man vs. Nature"<br />in a margin, perhaps now<br />is the time to take one step forward.<br /><br />We have all seized the white perimeter as our own<br />and reached for a pen if only to show<br />we did not just laze in an armchair turning pages;<br />we pressed a thought into the wayside,<br />planted an impression along the verge.<br /><br />Even Irish monks in their cold scriptoria<br />jotted along the borders of the Gospels<br />brief asides about the pains of copying,<br />a bird signing near their window,<br />or the sunlight that illuminated their page-<br />anonymous men catching a ride into the future<br />on a vessel more lasting than themselves.<br /><br />And you have not read Joshua Reynolds,<br />they say, until you have read him<br />enwreathed with Blake's furious scribbling.<br /><br />Yet the one I think of most often,<br />the one that dangles from me like a locket,<br />was written in the copy of Catcher in the Rye<br />I borrowed from the local library<br />one slow, hot summer.<br />I was just beginning high school then,<br />reading books on a davenport in my parents' living room,<br />and I cannot tell you<br />how vastly my loneliness was deepened,<br />how poignant and amplified the world before me seemed,<br />when I found on one page<br /><br />A few greasy looking smears<br />and next to them, written in soft pencil-<br />by a beautiful girl, I could tell,<br />whom I would never meet-<br />"Pardon the egg salad stains, but I'm in love."<br /><br />~Billy Collins