Once There Was a Thoroughfare

High in the Sierra the Interstate
cuts its own course above the dry creek bed,
its swerves matching the mountain sides
where math and matter marry to carve
the slopes I speed along, marvelling
at the mileage I make until, below,
I catch sight of a strip of buckled asphalt,
remnant of a turnpike no longer on the map.
This is how we age. Steep crests once
ground up laboriously in low gear are
blasted into empty air. One highway
replaces another. Weeds take root
in the cracks of the thoroughfare leading
nowhere. Above, traffic moves swiftly on.

***
Odd for me to realize that I wrote the first version almost thirty years ago, beating a retreat back to Canada on the I-5 somewhere near Mount Shasta.  An instance of what we might call senīlis praecox. 

 

Snapshot from Berlin

Is that a boy or a girl
she’s flirting across
the table with, sharing

a plate and pix on a phone?
Why do I care? He has
long hair but seems slight

from behind. She clearly
cares for him without
caring if he’s a man.

Maybe he’s not. At this
angle I can’t see if there
is more hair on his face

than a woman would
allow herself. When they
leave, they share the bill.

***
The third day in Berlin, deep in the throes of jet lag with all the good and bad that entails, I stumbled onto a wonderful little Kneipe on the Oranienburger Str, Meilenstein. I sat down on the short leg of the bar with a view on everything and read. Jotted down this poem, plus one in German (in the holding zone for the moment). Drank too much Riesling. The next day was a total waste.  In Truth Serum.