Branch LibraryI wish I could find that skinny, long-beaked boy
who perched in the branches of the old branch library.
He spent the Sabbath flying between the wobbly stacks
and the flimsy wooden tables on the second floor,
pecking at nuts, nesting in broken spines, scratching
notes under his own corner patch of sky.
I'd give anything to find that birdy boy again
bursting out into the dusky blue afternoon
with his satchel of scrawls and scribbles,
radiating heat, singing with joy.
A Few Encounters With My Face
1
Who is that moonlit stranger staring at me
through the fog of a bathroom mirror
2
Wrinkles form a parenthesis around the eyes
dry wells of sadness at three a.m.
3
The forehead furrows in a scowl
a question mark puzzled since childhood
4
Faint scrawl of chickenpox and measles
broken asthma nights breathing steam
5
Hair thinning like his grandfathers
all those bald ancestral thoughts
6
The nose a rams horn a scroll
as long and bumpy as the centuries
7
Greed of a Latvian horse thief
surprised by the lights
8
Primitive double chin divided in two
a mother and father divorcing
9
Deep red pouches and black bags
a life given to sleeplessness
10
Earnest grooves ironic blotches secret scars
memories medallions of middle age
11
It would take a Cubist to paint
this dark face splitting in three directions
12
Identify these features with rapture and despair
one part hilarity two parts grief
Charades
We waited on two sides of the subway tracks:
you were riding uptown and I was heading downtown
to a different apartment, after all these years.
We were almost paralyzed, as anxious
travelers surged around us in waves,
and then you started to pantomime.
First, you touched your right eye.
Then you palmed your left knee.
Finally, you pointed at me.
I made of a sign of understanding
back to you but the train suddenly roared
into the station and you disappeared.
From the Hardcover edition.