By Andrea Cohen

The truth is I left it on the bus
on purpose. Because I saw someone

else’s religion there and didn’t
want it to be lonely. The truth

is you should never begin
anything with the truth is

because then people will think
everything else you were saying

was false. The truth is all
I wanted was this: to fall 

asleep with you at the bus 
station, still holding our coffee 

cups, still holding our scepters.

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process

This project would seem to be all about bridges.

Aren't those the things they tend to blow up at the first blush of war?

I prefer the idea of building them.

Tell us something about the natural world that you love and don’t wish to lose. What are your thoughts on the kind of world we are leaving for the next generation?

I spend a lot of time in Wellfleet, Massachusetts. Walking in woods and by the sea. Swimming across a pond. It's a pond formed by glacial retreats from some 12,000 years ago. My hope? That we'll leave the ponds and seas and woods, and the creatures that call them home.

Photo credit: Razia Iqbal

Andrea Cohen is the author of eight books of poetry, including, most recently, The Sorrow Apartments. She teaches at Boston University and directs the Blacksmith House Poetry Series in Cambridge, MA.