bigness
i’m taking in the black bigness
of the sky from a manhattan roof.
stars are breaking through it,
more than i imagined i’d see in the city.
i remember reading of some galactic
car crash, milky ways and andromedas.
millions of particles collide:
my fingers, her hair.
how many windows do you think
are in this city? she says.
unknowable, i say, still looking
up. something moves or doesn’t.
millions of particles collide:
the wind, my arms.
this isn’t how i imagined living
on an island would be, i say.
you want chinese? she says,
looking over the edge
where two rails meet at a corner,
her face lit with the street below.
millions of particles collide:
my mouth, her neck.
i wrap myself around her
like the black around the stars.
yes, i say, i’m hungry. i peer
over the rails and take in the neon.
the chinese place downstairs
is called good advice. we go there.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
Reminds me of my nights atop the Hotel Carter in Times Square. wonder if anyone can still squeeze through the window to get to the roof - or have they Homeland Securitized that, too?
beautiful poem, miss your arguments.
Post a Comment