Belief in Correspondences
I don’t go around with the belief in correspondences
circling in my head as I turn
any corner in Paris, or San Francisco, or Portland , & I doubt Baudelaire carried
on that way, although the method for poets who walk,
the Whitmans, the Olsons,
well, we’re out there for a reason, &
it’s not the shortest distance between two
points, but labyrinthine meandering, looking up
down & around for nothing in
particular. Today out of peripheral vision I saw
a tree stroll down the street. New
spring shadows of limbs across asphalt. At the far
end of Pleasant, (sure, I could
long for Boulevard Saint-Germain or Telegraph Hill,
but don’t), I saw a mirage
of a man smoking, but no cigarette smell, &
just after I greeted one of his cats,
“Hello, Gato!” the train running parallel
to Forest Avenue pulled a black tank car
reading GATX before the blue Boston & Maine boxcar. I saw a goddess
cleaning
out the last empty bottles under the seat of her
car dressed in the tightest of blue
jeans outside the Redemption Center. After the clerk at the wine
store loaded up
my linen tote bag from Polaine on rue du Cerche-Midi,
the streets on the way
home lost all familiarity presenting strangers at
every corner who wanted to talk,
carry on, be surprised, until at the crossroads
of home & imagination the last of a
snow bank pulled back to reveal the coldest of rhinestone
hearts long off its
invisible gold chain sparkling in the sun like real
tears of love abandoned in
anguish.
@ Robert Gibbons, 2007
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