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In which the poets voice their individual opinions.


Words posted on a sign at East River Park (across from Grand Street/Lower East Side)
September 16, 2012
by

Welcome. This lawn is restricted to picnics and passive recreation. Please be courteous and respectful to others, and keep the park clean.
Rules prohibit:

  • Active sports
  • Dogs and pets
  • Amplified sound
  •  Barbecues and open fires
  • Illegal drugs and alcohol
  • Littering and glass bottles

I am pondering the phrase passive recreation. I have walked by this sign for almost eight years but only noticed it for the first time last week. Apparently, I can admire the trees while sitting on the lawn but if I stood and performed jumping jacks, this would be prohibited. If I wrote a poem I could tell people that I had written it as an exercise in passive recreation. I don’t think one would be allowed to move very quickly either. Walking might be OK but running would be considered active. I am considering how the creation of such space in a public park corresponds to the creation in one’s mind of quiet, private areas. This seems to be one of my ongoing jobs as a poet: to continually create such space in order to be able to write and have a poem connect to the world at large.



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