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Edwin Rolfe








 This is the Season of Death

This is the sixth winter: 

this is the season of death 
when lungs contract and the breath of homeless men 
freezes on restaurant window panes---men seeking 
the sight of rare food 
before the head is lowered into the upturned collar 
and the shoulders haunched and the shuffling feet 
move away slowly, slowly disappear 
into a darkened street.

This is the season when rents go up: 
men die, and their dying is casual. 

"Crowds around post office. Lower East Side, New York," by Dorothea Lange 1936
REPOSITORY: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA

I walk along a street, returning 
at midnight from my unit. Meet a man 
leaning against an illumined wall 
and ask him for a light. 
His open eyes 
stay fixed on mine. And cold rain falling 
trickles down his nose, his chin. 
"Buddy," I begin...and look more closely-- 
and flee in horror from the corpse's grin.

The eyes pursue you even in sleep and 
when you awake they stare at you from the ceiling; 
you see the dead face peering from your shoes; 
the eggs at Thompson's are the dead man's eyes. 
Work dims them for eight hours, but then-- 
the machines silent--they appear again.

Along the docks, in the terminals, in the subway, on the street, 
in restaurants--the eyes 
are focused from the river 
among the floating garbage 
that other men fish for, 
their hands around poles 
almost in prayer-- 
wanting to live, 
wanting to live!
 who also soon 
will stand propped by death against a stone-cold wall.

(1935)

John Ashbery

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