Don't you just love the way he develops his thought and his feelings in counterpoint with the actuality of making his breakfast tea as the day dawns? He is a poet of the profound within the ordinary. And what about the toughness and density of the final image? 
NEW YEAR'S DAY
 by Billy Collins
  Everyone has two birthdays
 according to the English essayist Charles Lamb,
 the day you were born and New Year’s Day—
 a droll observation to mull over
 as I wait for the tea water to boil in a kitchen
 that is being transformed by the morning light
 into one of those brilliant rooms of Matisse.
 “No one ever regarded the First of January
 with indifference,” writes Lamb,
 for unlike Groundhog Day or the feast of the Annunciation,
 this one marks nothing but the passage of time,
 I realized, as I lowered a tin diving bell
 of tea leaves into a little body of roiling water.
 I admit to regarding my own birthday
 as the joyous anniversary of my existence
 probably because I was, and remain
 to this day in late December, an only child.
 And as an only child--
 a tea-sipping, toast-nibbling only child
 in a colorful room this morning--
 I would welcome an extra birthday,
 one more opportunity to stop what we are doing
 for a moment and reflect on my being here on earth.
 And one more birthday might be a consolation
 to us all for having to face a death-day, too,
 an X in a square
 on some kitchen calendar of the future,
 the day when each of us is thrown off the train of time
 by a burly, heartless conductor
 as it roars through the months and years,
 party hats, candles, confetti, and horoscopes
 billowing up in the turbulent storm of its wake.
from the book, "Ballistics," © Random House 2008
 
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