Street Musicians

written by


« Reload image

One died, and the soul was wrenched out 
Of the other in life, who, walking the streets 
Wrapped in an identity like a coat, sees on and on 
The same corners, volumetrics, shadows 
Under trees. Farther than anyone was ever 
Called, through increasingly suburban airs 
And ways, with autumn falling over everything: 
The plush leaves the chattels in barrels 
Of an obscure family being evicted
Into the way it was, and is. The other beached 
Glimpses of what the other was up to:
Revelations at last. So they grew to hate and forget each other.

So I cradle this average violin that knows 
Only forgotten showtunes, but argues
The possibility of free declamation anchored
To a dull refrain, the year turning over on itself 
In November, with the spaces among the days 
More literal, the meat more visible on the bone. 
Our question of a place of origin hangs
Like smoke: how we picnicked in pine forests,
In coves with the water always seeping up, and left 
Our trash, sperm and excrement everywhere, smeared 
On the landscape, to make of us what we could.

© John Ashbery