Ah, my poems, here you are—
you’ve come home again!
Here is that white envelope I folded,
hopeful as a spinster’s linens,
the friendly black pica of my very own name typed by me,
my eager spittle under the sober head of each stamp.
My poems, who are so shame-faced as you greet me,
believe me I understand how you feel.
You’ve gone far and wide
from Chelsea, New York to Crete, Nebraska—
you have done your best
and nobody wanted you.

It's always the same:
the perfect vellum messages of sympathy from The Best
                          Magazines,
the snippets of bright paper scrawled “Sorry”—
the teasers which start out “April 14 (I think!)”
Nobody wants you.
I can picture the scornful glances they gave you,
the heartless way they dismissed you (summarily, I’m sure),
the clips, spindles, staples with which they mauled you—
(Who do they think they are sticking pins in my images?)

What is this viscous smudge in the corner of a love poem—
a thumb print, Kraft mayonnaise, editor’s ejaculant?