A Walk with Frank O’Hara
This morning I’m thinking of Frank O’Hara
strolling the streets of Manhattan,
debonair in white flannels, a small notebook
in one pocket, an egg and tomato
sandwich wrapped in wax paper in another.
He stops at a newsstand, plucks a Times
from the counter, buys a strong coffee.
Frank skims the headlines, then takes his lunch
to Washington Square, a place I’d come
to know well a decade later, as a girl of fifteen
wearing beads and feathers in my long braid,
those days my friends and I patrolled
the Village, eager for Dylan sightings, careful
of the twitchy speed freaks panhandling
on the east side. These days I’d be lost
there as any tourist, gawking at the locals
and the new condos shadowing the avenues.
O’Hara sits on the same smooth rim
of the fountain where we’d perch to flirt
with strangers, giddy at cutting class. Unlike us,
Frank’s urbane, tres cool, even as he sips his coffee,
chews his sandwich, and squints up at the sun.
Maybe he’s considering which clubs to hit
tonight, or where to dine before catching
the new Truffaut. He opens his notebook
and writes his sure lines in an elegant hand.
Here, there are no newsstands and the shops
are closed, some for good, the streets
downtown deserted as an empty movie set
and as sad. I walk the bridge over the Iowa River
wary, behind my mask, of those who come
too close. I’m trying to forget the morning’s news —
the 200 at a house-party in Beverly Hills,
the 250,000 riders in Sturgis. The virus
dirtying the air each time they laugh.
One writer warns that this is how we end,
not by contagion but because we no longer care
for each other. I stop and look out over
the river, imagine O’Hara and me walking
together in the city, and it’s spring, and we can
smell the salted pretzels and boiled hot dogs
from the vendors’ carts, the bright flowers
circling the plane trees. It’s still the ugly fifties,
but the Kennedys, King, and Malcom X
are still alive, and neither one of us knows
anyone who’s left real life for Vietnam.
One comment on ““A Walk with Frank O’Hara””