Jerusalem Verses
by P. David Hornik (April 2016)
1
But there are those who fade
when still rather young.
For a while their articles in the paper
are the talk of the town.
Then something happens—
an editor gets fired,
or some more intimate event
imposes a silence on them.
Their regular readers
keep checking for their name,
then shrug, forget.
Yet they continue to exist
in a covert quietude,
walking to the post office in the morning,
smiling at a cat on a wall.
Maroon leaves
they note the October sky
somberly compelling
after the naïve cheer of September,
bright clouds beaming from genial blue.
2
Summer mornings,
already too hot,
he’d quit work,
head to the pool.
Stop at the corner store
get wished abundant,
endless life
by the guy there.
Passing his ex-wife’s building,
passing his ex-girlfriend’s building,
ditto, though he was more tempted to.
The pool was drenched in
the bright apathy of summer. . . .
But that was too high-flown,
he couldn’t get away with words like those.
The dozing palm fronds
had already wilted in the morning glare. . . .
What was it he had to say?
Was there anything?
but the paper before his eyes
didn’t hide the hips of girls,
the hot monotony
of stranded time,
a summer where his voice,
even if he’d had one,
would have wandered off past the fence
and burned away in haze.
3
It wasn’t playing “The Nearness of You”
on his piano while night came on.
It wasn’t watching the first star form
over the obscure, far-flung city.
It wasn’t—though this was closer to it—
lying on his bed
while it got too cold in the room
and fall fell on the land.
“Exile [he could have said]
opens an emptiness
larger than fullness was,
a silence with more to say than speech.”
Still he couldn’t reach
the core of what it was.
It was not far
from the ancient muteness of the city.
____________________________________
P. David Hornik is a freelance writer and translator in Beersheva, Israel. In recent years his work appears especially on the PJ Media and Frontpage Magazine sites, and his book Choosing Life in Israel was published in 2013. He is also the author of a forthcoming autobiography.
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