What the City Does to You In Summer
This is what the city does
to you in summer: You are sitting
in the drive-thru line at the bank,
windows pressed against the car-
exhausted heat, when you see
a man, suited navy blue and crawling
in the street. He is screaming.
You cannot hear what he
is saying, and you are trapped
in a line that does not move
according to your need, so all
you can do is watch him grovel
in the road, and you wonder
if you’d help him even if you could,
thinking of the man last week
who asked for money outside your office;
you gave him five and he followed you
inside, demanding more, grabbing
your arm, rattling you like a tip jar
until security chased him away.
Kindness dies in this kind of heat,
and everything is ugliness.
Later, you won’t remember
the woman who got out of her seat
at the corner bus stop and dropped
down with him to the gutter,
fishing out a red-tipped cane
of white. You won’t remember
that the man was blind
and never crazy; all you’ll recall
is the screaming and the creeping
along the dirty curb, and imagine
the story ends with something
terrible, every time.
This is brilliant. I really enjoy a lot of your pieces. I especially love the way you structured this one. I love a good mid-phrase line break 🙂
Thank you very much!
Very compelling! Amazed at your productivity, turning out one fine work after another!
Thank you – many of these were written previously and are not new though. If it’s a new one, I’ll put “new poem” in the title!
Yes — it’s always nice to have a sense of when something is written — be great if you put dates for the older ones as well as new for you recent ones.
that’s lovely…oh, achy, painfully lovely I mean.
Thanks so much!
Kindness dies in this kind of heat,
and everything is ugliness
So very true!
Thanks, Mel!
Beautiful!
True, memory is selective, tuned to the story that the mind constructs.
Thank you, Uma!