Such raiments would be the province Of those gated and corniced places Up on the hillside, and even that milieu Living on residue and recollection, The glories of the past Fading like so many past-peak October leaves, Beautiful in the sense of such colors They heretofore possessed, Though in any case, the whys and wherefores And relative merits of thens and nows Secondary to more prosaic matters: The price per gallon at the Gulf station down on Route 17, Seasonal temps at Bear Mountain Trying line up some other gig or side-hustle Once the land locks and the leaf-peepers and hikers go home, Those hoping corroded propane tanks and curled shingles Can make it just one more winter, And if the worried and wondering Enjoyed the luxury of philosophic musing, They might ponder upon what those earlier residents Who had lived at the apex of Manhattan society (And possibly even those earlier residents, Jumbles of Patroon and Lenape blood Who crouched forlornly in the Palisades As that skyline came into being) Would think of what became of this place, Yet as they look up there are no ghosts of the ancients, But merely the impassive, lazily circling turkey vultures, Implacable, enduring, constant.