I am sitting on the surface of the stone faced moon looking in through the gray above the green hanging over the black shingle roof of the room where I am sitting. I can't see me resting here.
The streets of my youth are out my window through a hole in the trees in the still autumn night. I must rise to the call of the bread truck man, to the whinny of the rag picker's horse, to the distant clanking of a slow freight train.
So far away on the stone faced moon how long my ears have thirsted to drink the sounds they cannot drink again, to sponge the voices from the streets of my youth and squeeze them back a drop at a time.
Sitting on the surface of the stone faced moon I can see the globe rolling cars upon it. Outside my window into autumn is the incessant din of transportation, the percussion of outbound movement toward the stone faced moon where I sit.