The Artist
An artist arrives in a
secondhand sweater, cable knit, holy
jeans with a cross adjacent
to a crescent, pentagram, and om
tattooed across his hands
stained with paints and ink
with pencil shavings for fingernails.
Finishing his absinthe in glass,
the jug echoes the melody of the one song he remembers
his grandfather sang him, the one song he remembers
from his family in Missouri,
before he surrendered to a broken heart.
Playing on the steps avant de bilbiotheque
(for he frequents the French Quarter), his dark eyes
act as the shutter on an antiquarian camera,
(which he hopes belonged to Méliès)
memorize the cracks in the sidewalk
(he wonders how they feel).
But he is unnoticed, too involved
in his own world that he desperately
wants to share, but everyone else
is busy counting shirts.