The City, with Elephants

The elephants of reckoning
are bunches of scruff
men and women picking up
thrown out antennae
from the rubbish
bins of the city
 
to fix on their tubular
bells and horn about
by oil can fires
in the freezing midnight
of the old new year
 
We ride by their music
every hour in cabs on trains
hearing the pit pat
of our grown-wise pulse
shut in shut out
 
from the animals
of the dry season
the losers and boozers,
we must not admit our eyes
into the courtyard
 
the whimsy of chance
and our other excuses—
dollars in pocket—
to write beautiful songs
is all I ask, God
 
to do right with friends
and love a woman
and live to eighty
have people listen
to the story of my trip to America
 
The elephants of reckoning
are beaten and hungry
and walk their solitary horrors
out every sunrise slurping
coffee bought with change
 
while in some houses
freedom-bound lovers
embrace late and read Tagore
about the people working
underneath the falling of empires.
 

Copyright Credit: Indran Amirthanayagam, "The City, with Elephants" from The Elephants of Reckoning.  Copyright © 1993 by Indran Amirthanayagam.  Reprinted by permission of Hanging Loose Press.
Source: The Elephants of Reckoning (Haning Loose Press, 1993)