I’m outside and the air is so crisp it’s turned brittle When I move, my hair cracks with electricity As if with each step I take, I displace And crinkle the wafer oxygen. My hair, it is poised like a snapping electric halo, And I think how many angels have also had feet Which knew this frozen, frosty soil like mine do. What a shame we could not have met and compared notes. Above is a ceiling, nearer than people credit to be. There is no navy shroud tonight, Seasoned with the universe. It is not even a black curtain, But instead a piece of smoke fogged glass, graying. Above the briery penthouses of the evergreen boundaries, Against which the glass rests, Is a blush of light, to the North, tattle of a city. They call it light pollution, a lightening of the sky Due to artificial, phosphorescent, perpetual pantomimes of noon: streetlights And I see two electric halos, One belonging to me One the heavens, And I think how funny that Without the dry, horrid winter air, or the residue of a wasteful city of men, No halos would exist.