Concerning the Angel at 5th & 53rd
by J. P. White Every city has them——pools of helmeted, stained men Clustered around engines grinding through night. White arc lights sear the jagged, scraped surface Of dirt and cut stone as the men stand guard Over broken water mains, busted sewer lines, road repair. Who knows how long they've been there, caught By the old mephitic street vapors, swallowed by the noise Of machinery, the long blue flashes of smoke? Where much is lacking, faces say, there are many wishes. Or so it seemed after midnight at 5th and 53rd When this black woman in tight red shorts, lacy blouse, And black bra clipped past men cutting out a section Of curb with backhoe and jackhammers. A riveting Giotto Angel, she'd plunged to earth to fill momentarily the wing Of a triptych. As she turned the corner, a white man hunched Over a hammer, took his eyes off his work, "Hey, Valentine, I'll take some of that." With his compressor hissing over Taxi horns, she never noticed his pain when the hammer Hit his boot, probably broke his foot. He slumped, wailing, Ripped the gold cross from his neck as though he might Heave it after her. I could see in his eyes how close Hate is to love——the Angel of Mercy now an ugly cunning Fury, the source of so much uninhaled pollen, the cause Of the world cut in twain——as she vanished deep into The luminous fibers of the neat block, both answering And failing to answer the many prayers she had heard. |