I’d walked the length of Murray Avenue many times
& strode up or down Forbes disdaining bus exhaust & rain,
stopping on the public course’s first tee to marvel at the lights,
an industrial tang suffusing the Pittsburgh air then, Flagstaff Hill behind
or just ahead, depending, but this was the far-downtown bedlam
of Manhattan, where I couldn’t help thinking myself
one of Whitman’s roughs while seventeen times a block
being revealed as a permanent rube. My new wife motored
down the sidewalk when one existed & zoomed faster
when all we had was asphalt or plywood-roofed scaffolding.
The noise obliterated metaphor. To keep pace, I imagined myself
Frank O’Hara & patted my pocket notebook. She yelled when I stopped
to answer the first few nut jobs ranting at my helicopter & gold bullion.
At the red light, she said, “You’ll never get anywhere like that.”
John Repp is a writer, folk photographer, and digital collagist living in Erie, Pennsylvania. His most recent collection of poetry is Never Far from the Egg Harbor Ice House, published by Sheila-Na-Gig Editions. Scads more information about Repp, his work, and his interests/obsessions can be found on his website: http://www.johnreppwriter.com
