![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi0vg7-t_lZOTt5mh_RYaYhr_0rVGkEYUKKx3hLSLnwnq0PJhlXz4L3QS2DdDlCJlpqd0BU-HegVypuYgx2H1wL0h1o9c7m1hs6p-206KWvYPjSWy6erK9HyCYVMI8fBmZ3xZqu7LVt4LFDBvv5g-p78CtaUIJfoCPbbvloDfhc6EvlyQ6DbUoSaC55gKo/w403-h317/art=2520paul_cezanne_card_players.jpg) |
Paul Cezanne Oil on Canvas 1894-95 The Card Players |
I’m glad Cezanne was not here in Key Westto set up an easel, and paint
the card game I was in last night,
unless he was really good at depicting despondency.
Cezanne once said that a single carrot,
if painted in a completely fresh way,
would be enough to set off a revolution.
I’ll bet he was sitting in a café that day
where such observations are usually made,
but if I had been sitting in that café
across from Cezanne, I would have quipped
“Maybe if Bugs Bunny were in charge of things,”
and I would have described in a fresh way
how the famous rabbit might be portrayed
using a carrot to point the mob to the Bastille.
Beer and chips and more beer and chips
were served at the poker table,
but no carrot soup, a staple on every menu
in the bunny rabbit stories of Beatrix Potter
and a dish that would have warmed me
inside and out the way a good soup does
and made me feel much better
about losing all my money and then some.
But at least now I have found the answer
to the old question of who would you invite
to your ideal dinner party:
Paul Cezanne, Bugs Bunny, Beatrix Potter,
and okay, maybe at the last minute, Gore Vidal.
Billy Collins, The Card Players