| On skyscrapers’ mirrored façades, bruised shadows, bluish, reflecting the mystery of loneliness in a crowd, as mad sidewalks stamp their clout, chiding pedestrians into limits between signals. Foreboding lack of consciousness through moving metal, packed street gasps for air, fuming and coiling with inner rot, like a hobo in moth-eaten rags afraid to take roots, with nowhere to go. Playing down inner grief, store-fronts pose in gentle seduction, making up stories they can’t finish but succeeding to manipulate materialism. And I, in front of a showcase offering wigs, stop and dream of the way my mother’s hair used to fall in a curve of gold. |