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The Literary Review

Issue 9         Page 52

Memories of Brooklyn

I was there.

I could almost reach out and touch the distance

the delicate balance between us, between the beating heart

seated there, and the eyes of the man…

the becoming of, the partaking of having been in the past

tense born other than myself wondering what I would

be doing standing there on the street corner

on Kings Highway at 4 o’clock in the morning holding a plastic bag

with my left hand in my back pocket

(at that time of night)

Another nervous me-looking lady is waiting for a bus,

her face resembles the fragile consciousness

beating in my head, which wondered

only a moment ago

why it could take half a lifetime

for the price of eggs to drop 50 cents

while the cost of everything always seems to go up.

Strange this short distance transmigration of ethos.

They wonder if I am as much in them

as they are in me

and perhaps feel the same sensitive pulse of an alien being

coursing through the veins somewhere

between the wrist and the elbow

‘Are you working?’ the voice at the window of my cab

inquires.

‘Where you going?’ (can’t be too careful nowadays)

‘How much to Flatlands and 56th?’

For 6 bucks I shudder all the way at the thought

of a knife in my back

and the hungry man climbing out of the night

into the backseat, into the perfect environment

of my rock-n-roll taxi,

a hideous monster demanding all my money,

leaving me dead for a hundred bucks

and a half-smoked pack of Camel light cigarettes

Brooklyn is…

Brooklyn is moving from Manhattan to Parkside 

circa ’56, Erasmus Hall with Bobby fisher and Barbara Streisand

and Garfield’s cafeteria on Ocean and Flatbush Avenues,

Brooklyn is Boro Park and Bay Ridge and Brooklyn Heights

and Linda Zuckerman and brainy Miriam Finegold

my first love  my second  my tenth my next to last

exit from Flatbush Billards to Saint Marks and the Bouwerie,

Brooklyn is my dad standing by the King’s Highway station

reading a newspaper he found in the garbage around the corner

at OTB,

Brooklyn is an old phone book in pencil

smudged around the edges like a halo of dust

but still readable. oh

when will those Manhattan days and Brooklyn nights at my mother’s house

disappear forever. No, never

At one time, there were more Jews in Brooklyn than the State of Israel

Rheingold Beer and the Brooklyn Navy Yard

where my father worked as a machinist during the war,

I still have his quaint catalog of Starret tools somewhere in the boydum,

Brooklyn is a day’s pay for driving a taxi all night

delivering drugs to Red Hook and Brownsville

from Bedford Stuyvesant to Manhattan Beach, over the bridge

in Sheapshead Bay.

Brooklyn was the last stop to Coney Island when I was a kid

on the Lower East Side when Hoboken was the other side of the world.

I am flying over Brooklyn now in my dreams,

they are all gone, Erica in the park and pizza at the King’s Highway station.

08.13.03

American Woman

She crosses her legs

and pulls on her dress down over her knees

as she sits on the subway to Brooklyn

reading the Old Testament.

Jesus dominates her thinking

to whom she is wedded,

an immaculate virgin

pruning herself for the new messiah.

Not only are her legs crossed

but her neck, hanging from a crucifix

reveals  ever so faint  slight  white

patch  of pale skin  concealing

the mystery of her flesh.

9-Nick-Romeo_Sequence
© Nick Romeo: Sequence
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