Blue workshirts
crusted in salt-rings,
sweat born out,
of foundry heat,
smelters blaze,
soups of molten copper,
where a trip sends lava
flowing down ramps
to melt men’s ankles,
makes castings of souls
who labor
for low wage,
no esteem.

Suiciders atop vats
swan dive into
ore pools,
vanish like vapors.
Here, then
simply gone.
All they were,
now steam.

On the subway home,
I doze to the sports page,
dream of powerful
drives to center,
propelled by torque,
strong hips, action,
sympathetic knees, breaking wrists,
the geometry of grace,
the boys of summer
kiss the cheeks of autumn ladies.

Sweet grass,
new, mown.
City sparrows
on ginkgo trees
in the high branches aside the el,
lilt fossil
melodies,
call to me
through open train doors
to wake me
at some station after mine.

I smell the heavy layer of my own sweat
there on my clothes,
the heat of the train
an oven
that bakes me proper.

I rise, exit,
to debut on this foreign platform,
sad to have missed my stop,
to have missed my time.

I search the faces of those around me,
for the one to help
point the way back,
the staircase to the other way.

© Carlos Chagall, 2013