Hypocri-city
The city is an ugly place
I saw a rat in Central Park
And what’s worse is
There’s a man next to me on the subway
Who rejects deodorant from his repertoire.
There is piss on the corners
In the streets
On the plants
But in the city’s defense
I see a man
With a baby
And the baby’s cute face
Which upon closer observation
Is caked over with snot
—a disgrace.
I close my eyes
Imagining a meadow or some place
Better than the city
And I wait and I wait
My thoughts are disrupted
With a honk and a yell
“Man I’m driving—what the hell?’
After all
The rats in the park were just trying to smell
The small flowers that grow in the shapes of a bell
and the man on the subway just had to tell
me of the time that he just about fell
in love with a woman who he met in the street
after she stepped in urine—and with that on their feet
they danced all night to their loving heart beats
After dating and marriage, they did what lovers do
And had not just one child, but two
It was this very day the first babe slept in
Keeping her mother up in their apartment
And the father with the second
Took him
On the subway for the very first time
Where he cried and he cried
Until his eyes
Rested on his mother’s again
And let out a sigh.
At least this is what I imagine to be true
It explains the ugly, but it gives me hope
That beauty exists in this city too.