Dream of Low Houses

I was there; and the river
was there everywhere;
             in the glue
             of dead leaves and dew stuck to its shores;
             in the cracked cement sides;
             in the old valley walls
widened by quarries that are gone now
and quarrymen that are gone now too;
                          in the roads;
                          in the snail tracks;
in the accumulations
of stringed earplugs; in curbside cigarettes
            left from graveyard shifts;
            in low houses with plastic
            on front windows
to seal themselves from foundry dust;
            in the explosion at Falk
Corporation that dented the fire station door
a mile and a half away;
                                         in the fish
flat as butter knives that die gasping
after following big ships
from north on the Lake,
(dying
             they are not used to the warmth
             of the harbor);
in the coyote that limps in the quarry carveout
to sun himself on Christmas morning;
in the fox that eats the birds that die
frozen to the Lake in a snap; and in the light
that seems to change monthly
though I know it never
changes in that way.

I was there
                         with a friend
at the Protestant shelter
that gave us food for believing
             we were not to blame for the state of our lives
             and for accepting the state of  Lord  Jesus Christ
as we prayed and slept in a dormitory with 20
bunks full of men flatulent or masturbating
             and I saw the invisible heart of  Jesus Christ
like a  jellyfish it stung me
like ticks I had it
             in the seams of my jeans
like an arrowhead it dug into the flesh above
my ankle. And I told Jesus, listen, if you come by me
             use the side door or the back, never the front,
             the side or the back is for family.

Source: Poetry (June 2022)