This is Just To Say by Williams

I have eaten
the plums
that were in
the icebox

and which
you were probably
saving
for breakfast

Forgive me
there were delicious
so sweet
and so cold

Old Man and the Net


No, no.  Do not disenchant my world today,
With keyboards or that screen.
I have a life to live,
One that involves breathing beings.

Please do not hold out that thing to me.
That small writhing thing full of numbers.
I've had to talk to family twice this morning.
It put me completely off my sandwich. 

I'll take that book of poems.
The one that was written pre-net.
It has no depressing abbreviations
About laughing off your bits.


There's  a lady at the library, 
Who appreciates men like me.
No! Not old and wrinkly, you ass.
She likes her beaus wire free.

Behind Grandma's House by Gary Soto

At ten I wanted fame. I had a comb
And two coke bottles, a tube of Bryl-creem.
I borrowed a dog, one with
Mismatched eyes and a happy tongue,
And wanted to prove I was tough
In the alley kicking over trash cans,
A dull chime of tuna cans falling.
I hurled light bulbs like grenades,
And men teachers held their heads,
Fingers of blood lengthening,
On the ground. I flicked rocks at cats,
Their goofy faces spurred with foxtails,
I kicked fences. I shooed pigeons.
I broke a branch from a flowering peach
And frightened ants with a stream of spit.
I said "Chale," "In your face," and "No way
Daddy-O" to an imaginary priest
Until grandma came into the alley
Her apron flapping in a breeze,
Her hair mussed, and said, " Let me help you,"
And punched me between the eyes.