Poetry Feature: At the Library by Josh Lefkowitz

Back at the library, trying to write

an interesting poem about ancient Greeks

 

but some little girl won’t shut up about horses

and the two librarians are being too Minnesota-nice.

 

They had six different words for love, those Greeks:

Eros, Philia, Ludus, Agape, Pragma and Philautia.

 

“DO YOU HAVE ANY BOOKS ABOUT HORSES?!”

 

Eros, of course, is the most well-known:

Passion, driven by desire.

 

“WHAT ABOUT MOVIES ABOUT HORSES?!”

 

And Pragma, I think, is a worthy aim –

developed over time, as a river carves rock.

 

“ARE THERE ANY AUDIO BOOKS ABOUT HORSES?!”

 

Y’know, I’m really trying to practice Agape here –

love for everyone, including annoying little girls –

 

but I’m also pursuing Philautia – self-care –

and that means writing, and that needs quiet.

 

“MOM! MOM! MOM! WHERE ARE YOU MOM?!”

 

Her mother – not deaf, just regretting her life –

hides in the stacks and swipes through her phone.

 

Back to the ancient Greek shelves I go,

this time not for love, but Euripides.

 

There’s some good ideas in here, I say,

interrupting the mother-phone session, handing her a play:

 

Medea.