On the Roof

by C. K. Williams

C. K. Williams

The trouble with me is that whether I get love or not
I suffer from it. My heart always seems to be prowling
a mile ahead of me, and, by the time I get there to surround it,
it’s chewing fences in the next county, clawing
the bank-vault wall down or smashing in the window
I’d just started etching my name on with my diamond.

And that’s how come I end up on the roof. Because even if I talk
into my fist everyone still hears my voice like the ocean
in theirs, and so they solace me and I have to keep
breaking toes with my gun-boots and coming up here
to live — by myself, like an aerial, with a hand on the ledge,
one eye glued to the tin door and one to the skylight.





Last updated October 03, 2022