Stephen Kuusisto is the author of the poetry collections Only Bread, Only Light and Letters to Borges, as well as the memoirs Have Dog, Will Travel, Planet of the Blind, and Eavesdropping. A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, he teaches at Syracuse University, where he holds a professorship in the Center on Human Policy, Law, and Disability Studies.

Three Poems

by Stephen Kuusisto


Invisible Cities, Redux

Italo Calvino has invisible cities and I recommend

them. What could be better than traveling the universe
and finding extraterrestrial versions of Venice?

I go out in the early morning rain in Galway, Ireland,
and tap the cobblestones with my white stick.

Immediately I get lost.

On my left there is a river.

On my right there is a window shutter making a kind of
funereal percussion.

“Songs of the Earth,” I think.

I am not unique.

I stand beneath the shutter and weep.


I love this world.

I am alone in a new city.

If I died here beside the river and the window maybe everything I’ve known would make sense in the gray of an Irish minute.

“Good-bye to the peregrine falcons,” I think.

Good-bye to the glass of water that contains a single daylily.

Farewell to Mahler on the radio late at night.

Don’t get me wrong.

I get lost in cities every week.

I have learned much by following, blindly, the whims of architects.


Mornings with Borges

People on couch
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