When the poem ends on an expected note, try adding just one more line but one that comes to rest at a slight angle to what was said before.
Example from the ending of Al Purdy’s “"The Last Picture in the World”:
almost sculpture
except that it's alive
brooding immobile permanent
for half an hour
a blue heron
and it occurs to me
that if I were to die at this moment
that picture would accompany me
wherever I am going
for part of the way
Notice how easily the poet may have settled for the ending “wherever I am going,” but the addition of the phrase “for part of the way,” undercuts the certainty and leaves the poem in a less measurable state.
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