Unknown, 1960's |
Pastoral of the City Streets
1
Between distorted forests, clapped into geometry,
in meadows of macadam,
heat-fluff-a-host-of-dandelions dances on the air.
Everywhere glares the sun's glare,
the asphalt shows hooves.
In meadows of macadam
grazes the dray horse, nozzles his bag of pasture,
is peaceful. Now and then flicks through farmer straw
his ears, like pulpit-flowers, quivers
his hide; swishes his tempest tail
a black and sudden nightmare for the fly.
The sun shines, sun shines down
new harness on his withers, saddle and rump.
On curbrock and on stairstump the clustered kids
resting let slide some afternoon: then restless
hop to the game of the sprung haunches; skid
to the safe place; jump up: stir a wind in the heats:
laugh, puffed and sweat-streaked.
O for the crystal stream!
Comes a friend's father
with his pet of a hose,
and plays the sidewalk black
cavelike and cool.
O crisscross beneath the spray, those pelting petals and peas
those soft white whisks
brushing off heat!
O underneath these acrobatic fountains
among the crystal,
like raindrops a sunshower of youngsters dance:
small-nippled self-hugged boys
and girls with watersheer, going Ah and Ah.
2
And at twilight,
the sun like a strayed neighbourhood creature
having been chased
back to its cover,
the children count a last game, or talk, or rest,
beneath the bole of the tree of the single fruit of glass
now ripening,
a last game, talk, or rest,
until their mothers like evening birds call from the stoops.
A.M. Klein
Just because. It's been a hot summer here in the city.
Even though the setting of my childhood was different,after reading this I'm back on my street where we play kick the can, I'm too young to even remember how it was organized, I just play, the only rule, home before the street lights come on.
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