Milton

字號:


     by David Groff
     Not the poet-though yes,
     a poet, aspiring. Old.
     At Big Cup he regards us
     slickened with testosterone,
     his eyes entertained.
     Though his full hair helps him
     seem a youth in drag
     save for the swags of his neck,
     he can't but help present
     himself as age itself,
     a brand of birthmark
     we think we won't accrue,
     unnerving as June rime
     limning a suburban lawn,
     as if he were a black man
     scouting a Mormon temple.
     His melting candle of body,
     cupped, burns. He grins.
     Compare him to the man-crone
     trolling Our Place
     in Des Moines with Frank
     Fortuna and Dan Grace
     two decades ago:
     Brutally cruising, drunken,
     his halo of hair aflame,
     he swaggered to budding men
     declaring "You'll be me!,"
     his annunciation denunciation,
     then stalked off, sated.
     The boys, abashed and angry,
     decided time was a virus
     you just had to swallow.
     "The faggot angel of death,"
     Frank baptized him.
     Now Frank is fifty-one,
     commences drinking at noon.
     Maybe knowing Frank,
     or himself an initiate of crones,
     and warhorse of Village cafes
     whose soldiers now are wraiths,
     (who here knows
     what old men know?),
     Milton acts like he belongs.
     He steps among tattoos,
     buzzed hair, and bashful mouths,
     inhales the caffeine and finds
     himself an appropriate chair,
     surveying the sipping guys,
     while taking care to seem
     a clean old man.
     He winks, to summon us
     to the fallen fruit of himself
     that if we've got guts enough
     we will pick up and eat