Monday, October 28, 2019

Old Men Sitting Too Long in Coffee Shops



Old men sitting too long in coffee shops
Are the great sages of the world;
And old men in chairs on sunny sidewalks
Are Buddha and Solomon, Jesus and Groucho Marx.

It’s possible just to sit, they say.  It is.
You might have coffee, or a paper handy,
Or an old friend who knows all your old jokes,
And laughs with pleasure, hearing them again;

But then again, you might have nothing –
No coffee, no paper, no friend, no jokes –
And that would be all right too, and much the same,
Especially if a bird hops by on the sidewalk,
Or the waitress absently smiles on her way,

Because it doesn’t take much – they say –
It doesn’t take much.  It may even look like nothing
If you’re used to something more.
But that’s the trouble, isn’t it?

You all expect the world.
And we did too, and now we sit,
Triumphs and griefs forgotten –
Or not forgotten exactly, so much as put aside,
Like the paper, the coffee, the friend, the bird,
All of which are very nice, very nice indeed,
But not quite of the essence, which is something else,
Something we can’t quite explain to you, but if
You sit here quietly for a year or twelve,
You’ll start to have a feel for it, and then
You’ll finally know what we were talking about,
Not quite too late to thoroughly enjoy it
Before you disappear, unmissed, unmourning,
As we by then will long ago have done.

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Soul Season



If autumn isn’t your favorite season,
You don’t have a soul.
I’m sorry I’m the one
Who had to break it to you.
I’m sure you’re very nice, and maybe even
Susceptible to Mozart, but no soul.

Spring’s empty promises are fine for girls,
And summer’s raw seduction is a boy’s hot dream,
But full-grown human persons need a mellower joy,
And winter is for Russians
And their drunk, mad Russian bears.

So give me autumn, with its crisping leaves,
Sharp wind, rich odor, and long winterish nights.
Give me the smell of smoke among the trees,
The many-colored world, the crunching light,

And over all the smug, warm knowledge that my soul,
Battered as it may be,
Is still in me.

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Girl in Bookshop, Galway



Never seen someone attack a bookstore like you did:
Diving and prowling, eyes bright with hungry fire,
Fingers racing along spines, giving them shivers,
Searching, it turned out, for Frost.

It seemed a kind of trance that you were laboring in,
And I was loath to break it, but a voice
Beat carpe diem into my dull brain
Till I was more fearful of not speaking –
Though not, admittedly, by very much.

The fire didn’t fade from those wild eyes;
You didn’t raise the shutters of politeness
Over your eager very-Irish face.
That’s when I knew it wasn’t only books
That kindled you and made you beautiful;

It was the world – the vast and brimful world –
Made vivid in a line about Vermont,
Or other places you had never seen,
Or in a stranger’s awkward hoping smile
In a bookshop, in Galway, where Frost would have to wait.

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

The Natural City



New York City is nobody's fault.
It sprouted here, one building at a time,
Then thousands at a time, till finally
It came to be this glorious hell it is.

Don't blame the Dutch; they only wanted
A place to park their ships.
The Brits had little more ambition, but
The city itself had its own plans.

Just look around you; does it look thought-through?
Is this a city you would stencil out?
It's a tumor, an orchid, a still-happening accident,
Reckless and unapologizing,
Flaring up like some outré lichen
On, across, this once-innocent island.

Sure, there are signs of intervention –
Parallel streets, a graceful park.
Don't let them fool you; they're the trellis that
The hungry kudzu greedily consumes.

Nothing could be more human
Than all this gruesome, unintended sprawl –
Whose knifelike spires affront the sky,
Whose roots hook deep into the meat of the earth –

Nothing could be more appallingly perfect;
Get out, get out, if you possibly can.