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American Life in Poetry

Nebraska's Ted Kooser, U.S. poet laureate from 2004 to 2006, offers "American Life in Poetry," a column on contemporary poetry.

At a time when a relationship is falling apart, sometimes the news of its failure doesn't come out of a mouth but from gestures. Claudia Emerson, who lives in Virginia, here captures a telling moment.

Eight Ball

It was fifty cents a game


beneath exhausted ceiling fans,


the smoke's old spiral. Hooded lights


burned distant, dull. I was tired, but you


insisted on one more, so I chalked


the cue—the bored blue—broke, scratched.


It was always possible


for you to run the table, leave me


nothing. But I recall the easy


shot you missed, and then the way


we both studied, circling—keeping


what you had left me between us.


Poem copyright ©2005 by Claudia Emerson, whose most recent book of poetry is "Figure Studies," Louisiana State University Press, 2008. Poem reprinted from "Late Wife," Louisiana State University Press, 2005, by permission of Claudia Emerson and the publisher.


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