The musings of the solitary walker by René Magritte
Dear Readers,
Solitude is a running theme in Bob Hicok’s oeuvre — how we’re alone in the world, and together in this aloneness. This poem, aptly titled “Fire”, ignites a dialogue with the abyss of our inner worlds. This short poem illuminates the depths of loneliness with incisive wit and tender reflection. Through his classic humor, Hicok invites us to confront our existential queries head-on. He reminds us that despite the weight of our individual burdens, we are bound together by the shared experience of being human.
May we learn to carry the burden of our loneliness,
Karan
Fire
by Bob Hicok
Is your solitude crushing? Do you feel like a milk carton at the bottom of the ocean with your face on it asking the abyss, Have you seen this child? The abyss shrugs and puts its back into digging the hole other holes look up to. “Dunno” is the entire vocabulary of the mysteries of life. That’s something a giddy man says. A limber man. A man with nothing to snooze. The funniest thing about life remains that we’re all in this alone together. I see your loneliness and raise your jumping out a window with trying to catch you, the only sport that matters. One day you’ll return my cordless drill and the favor, and I’ll build a new set of bookshelves and try to live forever in the time I have to live awhile.
This poem was recently published in The Good Life Review.
I love this one. It is indeed “fire.”
When I read this poem, I see that we are alone and yet not so. We all are connected even if we do not see it. Nothing is single in nature including man. Your poem can remind one of that fact.
Good read!