Monday, April 22, 2013

that river



it’s daytime,
and a wide, swift river of
faces
is flowing down Sixth avenue,
rarely stopping
for
traffic lights.

a
steady
flow
of lives,
intertwined
in that river,
but essentially separate,
unique.
I think about it sometimes,
about that river
of faces

don’t matter when you’re reading this,
it hasn’t changed
unless the city’s
gone,
but if it is, then
you and i
and these words
have gone with
it,
so what does it matter…

there are businessmen
and actors,
homeless youth,
the mailmen,
lawyers,
cops.
there are models,
teachers,
dog walkers,
and
beggars.
they’re all there.
in that river
of
faces
breeding
loneliness.

the city
is a vast, concrete maze
without an exit
where rivers, such as this,
run into
one
and form
downtown
alive,
till the sun goes down.

they say the city never sleeps,
but I have seen it sleep,
I watched it sleep.
it
sleeps,
but keeps the lights on.
at 3 am,
when bars are closed,
and food vendors are gone,
the only ones awake
are the mad ones
with no place
to
go,
the graveyard shift,
the forgotten…
the night nurtures a strange crowd
but it’s daytime now,

and I watch that stream flow
steady
like it’s never going to stop.
I watch the
faces
pass me by, and
I am happy
to know,
that I’m just a small kaleidoscopic spec
in their daily routine.
a memory,
if that even.

a decoration,
just another face

they probably won’t even remember.

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