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If Only He Can Get Back On His Feet

My little-lost friend

is that you I see

at times

sleeping on a park bench,

shopping carts

and effects anchored.

Homeless.

With your eyes holding shame,

brown and sad.

I can't help.

But see.

I see you inching,

inching along on the earth,

pitch black and poor,

weathered, severed

and dirtied.

Lost in time.

Mouth open.

Where open hands may be closed.

I do pass by you every morning,

thinking,

thinking of you.

As you drum your thumbs

to your own music,

in your own darkened world.

Where the albatross rest on your drooping shoulders,

as you piggyback what olive branches there are.

I can't help.

But think.

As you sit shrugging

in those same brown pants

and redshirt,

holding weeks of grime

and stench.

No doubt,

holding passerby's

casting eyes, thoughts

and conversation.

Sometimes,

I can't watch.

But hope.

Yes, hope and pray.

As you go looking into the pockets

of thrash,

digging for change,

literally,

hopefully,

three ways to paradise,

please,

yes, sir, please.

And maybe.

Just maybe.

You will find better

and parkgoers can use the bench again.

That would be a nice olive branch,

to give back,

my friend.

 

Logan Robertson

 

8/1/2018

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Written by
logan-robertson
Anchorage
Published
Aug 1, 2018
Lines·Words
59·196
Tags
#homeless#freeverse
Permission

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