Common Cause
by Bob Hicok
You go to work. People rub against you
like fleece or wood rasps. You rub against people
like nails or a cloud. You come home softer,
bleeding. You do this a hundred years or so
then retire. You're like everyone else
in how different you are from everyone else.
How alike. Your love of comforters and klezmer.
Your fear of dying and living too long.
Your breath visits and leaves, visits and leaves.
You're all it wants and too much to take.
The tide understands. The moon. Other things
that must go to stay. The mind understands,
the soul. If lucky, you fall in love
with the intangible shadows of a glance.
The manner in which a man pets a cat.
How a woman says hello as if opening a door.
And always not knowing what you want
but wanting it anyway. The haunting of desire.
To be held for years in the arms of a favorite shirt.
To row a boat to an island in a dream.
To be saved by a crow who lets you fix its broken wing.
To hear the machinery of the universe at work
in the click of a spoon you set on the counter
after a bite of something cool and clear, starlight
or frozen yogurt. The opposite of love isn't hate
but entropy, the going and going and going
to sleep. And language exists
so we can express the feeling
that we've been here before
to people who share our doubts
that any of this is real.Breathe (Copper Canyon Press, 2026)






Breathe is a wonderful collection, by far Hicok's best. I've enjoyed his work for years, but Breathe is at another level, the best poetry I've read in years. Thanks for sharing this poem.
This is the kind of poem that needs to be spread far and wide or maybe it is the far and wide that needs this poem? Either way... I am sharing.