10 floors down A girl crossing the square Calls out a cheerful tipsy “G’night !!!”
In the dry fountain A bronze water nymph Bares a single small breast through her careless gown Unselfconscious
Insulated in shadow A homeless man has encamped around a park bench His chest, a metronome of coughing As though his spark is missing on one cylinder
From black trees and lampposts Holiday lights hang Celebrating to no one
10 floors up In a gracious pre-war A pensioner stands looking down
The paned window yawns wide Exhaling heat into cold
The air settles heavy On New Year’s night
Distant sirens chirp and howl without harmony
An ersatz constellation of scattered city lights Reflects deep in the black glass of an office tower Giving the illusion of depth
10 stories down
To the pavement
Gutters drink Open throated The dirty water of A dirty quarter
Brick pipe storm drains connect the streets to the river Water joins water Sliding under derelict barges, tethered to buoys, Turning clockwise on the heaving pulse of ebb and flood
A bus approaches slow Empty but for the driver Pushing hollow air before it Splashes erupting through the rippling mirror light of puddles
Puddles filling potholes Potholes like lunar craters The moon so bright and sterile A crummy satellite covered in potholes Stealing light
The bus makes its turn and recedes The soft sound of its gas motor joins with the sound of accelerating rain
Back in the park Squirrels sleep While rats forage for missed peanuts Left out by tourists and children
The last of the taxicabs idles in front of the old Paradigm Hotel Waiting out the quiet
It’s almost as old as I am, the two of us having settled comfortably into our vintage years.
It’s from a happier time for wall clocks; a time when no time was told without a wall clock.
Every kitchen everywhere had one and our kitchen, like every other kitchen, was Mission Control. The clock was a prime mover; a second mother, both watcher and watched. Each second, the pointing hand tripped its advance; every jolting tick, another stroke of the scythe counting down the seconds to the day’s launch . . . 10 – 9 – 8 . . . . . . 3 – 2 – 1 . .
“Go to School”
There is a fractional pause when checking time; a pause between recognition and comprehension, between where the hands are and what they represent.
The face must be read, as with any encounter, be it lover or stranger.
And though it may be an easy read, honed through great familiarity, still it wants the moment.
It is, in its way, a mild flirtation; the clock’s face coyly withholding.
There’s a certain intimacy to it all isn’t there.
Face to face, mutually attentive to the here and the now. We grasp time as the clock gathers purpose.
This clock, my clock, looks like a bright plastic daisy; white petals surrounding a sunny yellow bloom, an electric cord acting as an impossibly long, impossibly fragile stem.
It does a pretty good job of telling time though I barely use it for that purpose anymore. And yet I still throw it the occasional look; there is an enduring attraction.
At one point I thought my clock had run its course; an uncomfortable hum having developed somewhere deep in its acrylic blossom, as if to complain of its labors; perpetually crossing the finish line of an uncontested race.
But a drop of oil quieted its complaint; a drop of oil and a little light surgery.
A toothpick to clear some dust and gunk from the gears and it’s as good as it’s going to get.
The fact is . . . It was never perfect. It was always a little slow; losing time as it accumulated the hours.
For a while, an imperfect mental note made up for the imperfect timekeeping. But finally, as we approach separate time zones, I feel the need to act. I can no longer tolerate the distance between us.
Behind its back, I gently roll the stem between my fingers, setting things right for the time being.
For the time being, we are once again in unison; 1:1
I could pull the plug; put it to sleep; relieve it of its labors and its painful redundancy. But that seems unnecessarily cruel; to rob it of its raison d’etre.
It also seems manifestly unnecessary. Time alone will accomplish the deed.
I suspect its wearing out has more to do with the accumulated corrections than with the actual keeping of time but either way this clock has never been a stickler for accuracy.
A Flower Power relic of the free spirited ’60s perhaps this clock does not overvalue conformity. Maybe it likes being a clock but doesn’t love it. Or maybe, like time itself, it is simply indifferent.
There is something in its cheerful looks and laissez-faire attitude toward timekeeping that I find appealing.
Which may explain why I keep this plug-in electric daisy; not because its function binds me to the present, but because its charm ties me to the past.
Its delightful face, so familiar and so dear to me. For us, keeping time has lost purpose.
It has been a slow reversal of form and function spanning decades; seconds became hours, years become days.
Someday, when all the ticking stops, what will remain?
This face, perhaps in the background of a photograph of a cat or a dog or a parent