Poetry
Saudade
One last trip
on the New Lots Line
that trundles up
from its tunnel
just as the Brooklyn neighborhoods
turn to Brownsville,
turn to near ruin.
The train takes the 90 degree
curve on 98th Street—
where my uncle
and aunt once lived,
and where the train’s screech might
wake the dead
or make you wish
you were,
and deposits me
at the Saratoga Avenue Station.
It’s been more
than 50 years
since I last rode this train
and stepped off at this station.
Slowly, I move down the steps
where my friend Artie
was knifed to death,
and where my mother was held up
twice. I’m here to walk.
Take in what my ancient
senses will allow.
It’s my “not much of a victory tour.”
I look at everything.
Smell, hear everything.
I move at little more than
a geriatric’s pace now.
Remember how I strode these streets
like I owned them?
And in a way,
I suppose I did.
I pass the old elementary school,
the first tenement I lived in—
I bet the people still sleep on the fire escape.
The street names have changed—
as have the people
who live in these crumbling buildings,
worse for 50 more years of wear.
Yet things are much the same—
working people with families
and kids playing stickball
in the schoolyard.
Here is where I left my childhood—
who knew it was so easy to lose?
Wearier but no wiser,
I Uber back to my hotel.
How the Time Goes
I buy 6 Yahrzeit candles
in glass jars on sale for 15 bucks.
They are supposed to burn
for 24 hours,
but they never do—
some longer,
some shorter,
like the lives we all live.
I light 5 tonight—
and put one away
for what comes next,
as it must.
I arrange them in age
order on the mantel.
It’s quite the family gathering,
though one or two could not stand
the others.
It reminds me of holiday gatherings—
how could it not?
when we shared brisket
and latkes, and a deep, sweet red,
followed by babka
and pot after pot
of good, strong coffee.
After, we’d play
a take no prisoners
game of penny poker.
Dad always went broke first.
The pennies
piled up by my grandmother.
Family,
the sea I swim in.
Komorebi
I take the path
through the oak grove
as quiet as a Sunday morning.
It’s all uphill,
and I am as drenched
as a child after baptism.
The dappled light
filtered through the leaves
has me stunned—
painted
neither dark nor light,
words fail it.
Is that
the origin
of the holy?
