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In Palo Alto by Denis Johnson

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Every day I have to learn more about shame from the people in old photographs

in secondhand stores and from the people

in the photographic studies of damage and grief,

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where the light assails a window and the figure’s back

is all we see--or from the very faces

we never witness in these pictures, several of whom

I passed today in their windows, some hesitant,

some completely committed to worthlessness--

or even from my own face, handed up suddenly by the car’s

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mirror or a glass door. When I was waiting

for a bus, the man beside me

showed me a picture of a naked youth

with an erection, and the loneliness

in his face as he held this photograph

was like a light waking me from the dead.

I was more ashamed of it than I was of my own

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a few days later--just tonight, in fact--

when solitude visited me on a residential street

where I stopped and waited for a woman to pass

again across her unshaded window, so that

I could see her naked.

line begins just after naked in previous line

As I stood there teaching

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the night what I knew about this sort of thing,

a figure with the light coming from in front

while the axioms of the world one by one disowned me,

a private and hopeless figure, probably

somebody simply not worth the trouble of hating

it occurred to me it was better to be like this

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than to be forced to look at a picture of it

happening to someone else. I walked on.

When I got back to the streets of noises and routines,

the places full of cries of one kind or another,

the motels of experience, a fool in every room,

all the people I’ve been talking about were there.

And we told one another we ought to be ashamed.

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From “The Veil” (Alfred A. Knopf: $15.95, hardcover, $8.95, paperback; 84 pp.). Johnson, author of several previous volumes of poetry, notably “The Incognito Lounge” (1982), has more recently published three novels: “Angels” (1985), about a petty criminal in Chicago; “Fiskadoro” (1985), about primitive fishermen off the Florida coast at a time when the United States has become just a memory; and “The Stars at Noon” (1986), about a journalist-turned-prostitute in Central America. His poems often present, as this one does, painful, extremely private feelings in public, exposed, anonymous places. 1987, Denis Johnson, by permission.

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