Tuesday 3.34: Poem

Tuesday 3.34: Poem
The 1887 St. Louis Browns, one of four professional teams to play in a series of raucous exhibition games in San Francisco on Thanksgiving that year.

This week, I’m just sharing one poem I’ve been working on. I hope everyone has a pleasant, relaxing Thanksgiving.


November

Another storm takes aim.
Ghost trail of cuts & scrapes,
cold basketball courts & the moon,
which is a drain clogged
dead with leaves, our home.

The air dries out in the winter
& every sound is crisper:
the insistent radio blaring across the alley,
the racket of silverware solemn hurried savage
on the restaurant patio.

They never drink coffee. They’re too shy.
They’re too red-visioned, taking every night
off the ocean. A poem is a hinge.

They say they don’t remember
breaking the glass. & anyway
they’re always breaking
these glasses.

A poem is a hinge.
There go the damn sirens again.