Virgil Hervey





		I wonder about the light in my window
		
 
		The cars at the stop light,
		the pedestrians on the sidewalk
		on the boulevard below.
		Night comes early these days,
		but I hate the blinds
		on the window over the sink.
		And I like the reflection
		of the red, yellow and green
		on the damp pavement
		as I cut up a chicken
		and argue with the kids.
 
		When they look up here
		and see me at my work
		they probably wonder if my life
		is as fucked up as theirs,
		the same as I do, when I look
		into their bright windows
		from the dark of night.

		


		slowing down the game
		
 
		the young ones flip
		and slash and move
		the ball, a blur
		ricochet sideboard,
		backboard, behind
		the goalie, across
		the mouth of the goal,
		off the post, a rocket
		to midfield where
		the old man waits
		patiently, pass
		to wing, center
		a slow dribble
		past a furious
		diving goalie.
 
		"Winners!" claims
		a little spectator
		barely tall enough
		to see over
		the edge of the table
		wanting a piece
		of that slow
		slow ball.

		



		welcome to the chicken factory
		

		back from the service
		and unemployed
		in central Maine
		where jobs are rarer
		than hen's teeth
		as they say
		I counted myself lucky
		to find something
		at the Ralston Purina
		chicken processing plant
		for twenty cents
		over the minimum wage
		which most of the workers
		were making there.

		only the tuck unloaders
		(which was me)
		and the killers
		(sharp knives, raincoats
		and knee high boots
		ankle deep in blood all day)
		according to the union
		had the skilled position
		or the requisite suffering
		to deserve more.

		and we got overtime
		lots of overtime
		coupla hours a day
		and if you kissed
		the foreman's ass
		you could work a half-day
		on saturday
		cleaning up around the place
		for time-and-a-half.

		one guy'd been there ten years
		raising three kids
		in an apartment
		in a ramshackle wood frame
		tenement in frenchtown
		worked every weekend
		paying off a color TV
		from the local K-mart
		couldn't understand why
		after a ten hour friday
		of ninety degrees plus
		covered in chicken shit
		and pin feathers
		I asked the foreman
		"Are you fucking kidding?"
		when he offered me
		saturday morning
		for the first time
		since I'd been there
		as if I'd been a good worker
		or sucked his cock.

		"You crazy?"
		the poor frenchie
		wanted to know.
		"You'll never get asked
		again!" he shouted after me
		as I took off
		after a frier
		that got loose
		and jumped the fence
		to the drive-in theater
		next to the plant
		just to bust my balls
		at the end of the week.

		



		life and death in Chinatown
		
 
		The fish are slowly dying
		in the big glass tank
		at the Pearl River Seafood Restaurant.
		The trick is to sell them
		and cook them for the customers,
		before they cross that fine line
		between marketability
		and the dumpster out back.
 
		There are sea bass, grouper,
		toad-fish and one long eel.
		And there are Dungeness crabs,
		still full of life,
		as persistent as Sisyphus,
		trying to climb the divider
		between themselves and those
		with the smell of death.
 
		The bass kiss the glass
		with angelic lips,
		pleading with sad fish eyes.
		They rise to the surface,
		desperately gasping for air,
		only to sink again
		onto the back of the eel.
		The grouper cruise slowly
		like medallion cabs,
		while the toad-fish
		rest indifferently
		on the bottom.
		 
		I look up from my menu,
		wondering which one
		I should rescue.

		




		pigeons in the rain
		
 
		It looks like rain
		then it is.
		The pigeons stop swooping
		in the cavern between
		my office and the probation
		department across the street
		to take shelter
		on my window sill,
		one male and two hens.
		He starts pumping himself up,
		his feathers swelling
		at the throat and chest.
		He chases one
		then the other,
		bull-humping each of them
		whenever he gets close.
 
		"All men are dogs,"
		Amy often tells me.
		"No dear,
		they're just pigeons,"
		is my reply.

		




		carnival days
		

		The kids must like the turmoil.
		They keep coming back
		every weekend,
		despite the scoldings,
		the angry exchanges
		between me
		and their mother,
		the hurried packing,
		and loud door slams
		on the way out
		to start the car
		and haul them back
		to Grandma in Queens.

		She comes back too.
		That same Sunday night,
		she'll slide between my sheets,
		serene;
		the strife packed away
		for another week
		into toy boxes
		in the other room.

		Last night we took them
		to a carnival
		in the parking lot at Shea;
		stayed until they shut down the scrambler,
		turned off the colored lights.
		and chased the crowd away.

		"Can we come back, tomorrow?",
		came a small voice
		from the dark
		in the back of the car
		as we headed down the parkway
		toward my place.


This page hosted by Get your ownFree Home Page