Poet's Corner: The indiscretion
March 22, 2010
Commentary by Ted Kooser, US Poet Laureate, 2004-06--

All over this country, marriage counselors and therapists are right now speaking to couples about unspoken things. In this poem, Andrea Hollander Budy, an Arkansas poet, shows us one of those couples, suffering from things done and undone.

Betrayal

They decide finally not to speak
of it, the one blemish in their otherwise
blameless marriage. It happened

as these things do, before the permanence
was set, before the children grew
complicated, before the quench

of loving one another became all
each of them wanted from this life.
Years later the bite

of not knowing (and not wanting
to know) still pierces the doer
as much as the one to whom it was done:

the threadbare lying, the insufferable longing,
the inimitable lack of touching, the undoing
undone.

"American Life in Poetry" is made possible by The Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright 2009 by Andrea Hollander Budy, whose most recent book of poems is Woman in the Painting (Autumn House, 2006). Poem reprinted from Shenandoah, Vol. 59, No. 1, by permission of Andrea Hollander Budy and the publisher. Introduction copyright 2010 by The Poetry Foundation. We do not accept unsolicited manuscripts.

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