“Teach Us to Number Our Days”

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In the old neighborhood, each funeral parlor 
is more elaborate than the last.
The alleys smell of cops, pistols bumping their thighs, 
each chamber steeled with a slim blue bullet.

Low-rent balconies stacked to the sky. 
A boy plays tic-tac-toe on a moon 
crossed by TV antennae, dreams

he has swallowed a blue bean.
It takes root in his gut, sprouts
and twines upward, the vines curling 
around the sockets and locking them shut.

And this sky, knotting like a dark tie?
The patroller, disinterested, holds all the beans.

August. The mums nod past, each a prickly heart on a sleeve.

© Rita Dove