WALKING FOR INSPIRATION
At least you have the pink-red azaleas
To comfort you, slender oak,
Planted by the curbside,
And protected by wrought-iron bars.
Perhaps you’ll grow to be tall and strong,
And some of your cantilevered limbs
Provide a panopy to passing motorists.
We need more trees and more flowers
And more parks in this concrete city,
A landscape of stone, mostly stone
And metal. All these people busy
Around town and the men too afraid
To smell a flower or hug a tree.
I grasp your young bole, and
Clutch it tight. I don’t know
If you are male or female,
But you are at most a teenager.
I grasp you to keep steady.
When I was young I thought
The whole carnival stopped
When I breathed my last breath.
I wish you to grow until mighty
Like your common epithet.
Only forgetfulness attends me,
My own, and others forgetting
I was alive, and why shouldn’t
They forget me. We are important
To ourselves, and a few others.
Then we die and are forgotten,
As is necessary for others to live.
DOCTOR’S VISIT
Rainbow tulips in the garden bed
Around the empty fountain, and several
Sparrows and pigeons on the elm branches.
Surely a madman will interrupt my stolen moments
In Stuyvesant Park. The psychiatrist says
I’m doing fine, and I concur, since I don’t see
Anyone hiding in my closet or lurking stealthily
Outside my door when I leave my studio
In an eager trance. There seems to be a conspiracy,
Though, of birds of colour in this city, as I never see
Any warblers, swallows, or goldfinch, or even
A blue jay locally. Suddenly I feel sad for no reason
Other than I can’t wear the crown imperial I saw
In Bleecker Street Park the other overcast day.
Harbinger of the return of the bloody English
Royalty stealing American free land in King
George’s revenge, or just a boon from Beauty’s
Palette for everyone to admire and enjoy?
Forget revolutions and Kings and Queens!
Too much blood has stained the purple floppy
Petals of the tulips I see beyond my reach.
A flash of History, a hawk, circles overhead;
I’ll buy myself a cappuccino and a cannoli.
STUYVESANT PARK
A teenage boy
Dressed in black,
Thin-framed,
Long-haired
Black curls
Around his head.
He has soft brown eyes.
I thought
He was a girl,
And I was attracted
To her.
Two dots
Make a line.
I see what I see
And draw conclusions,
No more.
EXCAVATION
As you dig
Through the Earth
Over your lifetime
Through layers
Of sediment,
You will find a fossil
Shaped like a leaf,
A hand,
Pulling you through
The darkest regions
Of time and space,
And you will find,
You are not even
An imaginable fraction
Of yourself
In this Universe,
Yet you will be happy
Because you are
No more than you thought
Yourself to be, a man,
Or a woman,
Aspiring through knowledge
And experience,
And the cooperation
Of Mother Evolution,
Godhood.
HIGH UP
From the waterfall
On the mountain
Falling in the tarn
Where you bathed
To the moment
I realized
You and I
Were once
Those twin rocks
That we sunbathed
On that morning,
Until
a silence fell
Lying between us,
As if it were a tree
With many branches,
And later,
Back in the water,
One floating,
One gasping.
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