RIGA, LATVIA (more revision)
I walk a narrow ledge far above the ancient city’s
teeming, it’s endless swerving cobblestones, it’s
Pushkin statue shining regal in the ribboned park.
(Poets loved and honored here). A canal below
gleams blue near paths that curve through tall birch
trees where couples stroll among gifts of tiny fragrant
flowers, meandering lovers teased by Springtime’s
burst, this bloodless birth of beauty.
I a solo vagrant wander along the wild Daugava’s edge
in Riga’s chilly air. A stolid woman and her white-haired
man sit still so quiet on morning’s dewy grassy banks,
two fishing poles in thickened ruddy hands, long lines
thrust far out into the broad rolling river. They wish
to land three or four glistening fish to later eat at
dusk
with potatoes and beetroot boiled, washed down with
shots of vodka fire, then with bellies fat with gladness,
he’ll whisper lusty thanks to her, and mean it, for their
pleasing supper.
But now as evening’s northern light slants gold as melted
butter, as lush as vespers sung by god-soaked monks in
this Baltic state far so far from home’s Pacific palm-treed
ocean, you and I avoid each other’s eyes while time flows
fast deep and final into the Gulf of Riga for perhaps one
last embalming.
At this end of day in late May, mute we wait like a couple
fishing--
where fresh grass caresses the vast Daugava seething—we
wait
and wait for what’s unnamed unseen but breathing, for something
elusive and good that may persist or not, that might never be
caught,
nor even understood.