Poem with One Fact

"At pet stores in Detroit, you can buy   
frozen rats
for seventy-five cents apiece, to feed   
your pet boa constrictor"
back home in Grosse Pointe,
or in Grosse Pointe Park,

while the free nation of rats
in Detroit emerges
from alleys behind pet shops, from cellars   
and junked cars, and gathers
to flow at twilight
like a river the color of pavement,

and crawls over bedrooms and groceries   
and through broken
school windows to eat the crayon   
from drawings of rats—
and no one in Detroit understands   
how rats are delicious in Dearborn.

If only we could communicate, if only   
the boa constrictors of Southfield   
would slither down I-94,
turn north on the Lodge Expressway,   
and head for Eighth Street, to eat   
out for a change. Instead, tomorrow,

a man from Birmingham enters   
a pet shop in Detroit
to buy a frozen German shepherd   
for six dollars and fifty cents   
to feed his pet cheetah,
guarding the compound at home.

Oh, they arrive all day, in their   
locked cars, buying
schoolyards, bridges, buses,   
churches, and Ethnic Festivals;   
they buy a frozen Texaco station
for eighty-four dollars and fifty cents

to feed to an imported London taxi   
in Huntington Woods;
they buy Tiger Stadium,
frozen, to feed to the Little League   
in Grosse Ile. They bring everything   
home, frozen solid

as pig iron, to the six-car garages
of Harper Woods, Grosse Pointe Woods,   
Farmington, Grosse Pointe
Farms, Troy, and Grosse Arbor—
and they ingest
everything, and fall asleep, and lie

coiled in the sun, while the city   
thaws in the stomach and slides
to the small intestine, where enzymes   
break down molecules of protein   
to amino acids, which enter
the cold bloodstream.

Copyright Credit: Donald Hall, “Poem with One Fact” from Old and New Poems. Copyright © 1990 by Donald Hall. Reprinted with the permission of Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Source: Old and New Poems (1990)