I've been hyping Mark Yakich's poetry for a couple of years, and thought I might share one of his poems here. Mark Yakich has one of the very best websites among modern poets -- drawings, photos, examples of his work. This example comes from "Peeling Potatoes" and also appears on his website:
PRETZELS COME TO AMERICA
Legend has it that Houdini, the son of a rabbi, picked his first lock
Because he wanted a piece of boysenberry pie his mother was keeping
Dead-bolted in the pantry. A busted closet means trouble. Doesn't it
Seem that as soon as you get one thing fixed in the house something else
Falls apart? Say, I might as well punish myself for Mommy's cancer,
Because who else is there at the foot of the bed to discomfit. Bedrooms
Really are nice in all-white. Sheets, curtains, lamps, laser-white metal.
The most important place for a favorite painting is opposite the bed:
The last impression you see at night, the first when you rise. Upstairs
The house has an expiration date, just as Henry James did. Poor Henry
Was criticized for not liking dumb people. He avoided women especially
Because one lady had fallen in love with him and then committed suicide.
They say that before Henry died he thought he was Napoleon. And it
Turned out that he did know a lot about Napoleon, just not the right sorts
Of things that made dying easier. Houdini, James, Napoleon. Neither
Houdini nor James liked to be called by their first names. But Napoleon
Loved his first name so much he destroyed many lives in order to
Keep it popular. Three great men, three great holes. Like in the pretzel.
Medieval monks gave pretzels to children who had memorized their Bible
Verses and prayers. To reinforce a lesson: the three holes in the pretzel
Represent the Christian trinity. Today there are 28 different kinds of
Pretzels in the world and that number continues, in fits and starts, to grow.