A poem I wrote years ago. It doesn’t rhyme, the cadence is odd, but I still like it. I’m not especially fond of tramps or ‘gentlemen of the road’ as they are sometimes called. But I thought perhaps one or two might have an interesting story, or in this case lamentable. I took the picture in Barcelona, and the expression on his face makes me think this man could easily be Joe.
Joe
He didn’t have a name
His story was unknown
He stood out on the cold street
His heart held in his hand
His dirty boots and muddy jeans
And tattered cloak beside him
A rumpled hat sat by his feet
With several coins within
A small black dog
Lay faithfully at his side
_________________________________
The rain poured down upon him
And he starred without knowing
At the road some yards ahead
He didn’t hear the voices
Though once they were clear and bright
He didn’t notice when they passed
Or the uncertain glances and wary eyes
_________________________________
Though often passed by younger men
Never a kind word or gesture
He made them uncomfortable
His withered fingers once drove a plough
His voice once commanded respect
His broad chest, once full and proud
Was sunken now, cradling his head
_________________________________
The wind tugged at his ragged clothes
Revealing worn and sun beaten skin
Tan, from summers long ago
As the brown earth he called his own
Acres of green, and black furrows
Now traced across his wizened face
As the rich fields once he knew
His eyes, deep blue pools
Now misted with a hoary rime
Another age born in his breast
His comrades lost to time
The watchman of the streets
His only companion his small black dog
His devoted friend
_________________________________
He met each morning wearily,
As though the thought of another day
Was more than he could bear
And at the setting of the sun
When his gnarled limbs drew long shadows
He vanished amongst the alleyways
The labyrinth of his home
His second shadow trotting patiently beside him
_________________________________
They noticed when he wasn’t there
The first and second day
His face now familiar as the buildings
The week drew on without him
And murmurs soon began
A month passed without a trace
His spot by the street still empty
It was as if a statue had been torn down
_________________________________
One evening someone heard a dog
Barking in an alley
Behind an old forgotten factory
A man lay against a dirty brick wall
His familiar hat in his lap
His white skin drawn tight
Pulling hard against his bones
_________________________________
His little black guardian stood over him
His body was thin, and his bark was weak
Yet he growled bravely
As they approached the body
And watched with frightened eyes
as they lifted and carried it away
When they looked back
The little dog was gone
_________________________________
Police began to ask the locals
For anyone who knew him
‘I knew him,’ called one threadbare man
From out a gathered crowd
His body was bent and broken
His face hid ‘neath frosted beard
‘He shared his lunch with me one time
And gave to me his cloak.’
He rasped, his voice thick and gravelly
He coughed and wretched,
His frame convulsed
And he turned as if to go
‘What was his name, old man?’
Shouted one of the police.
A look of sorrow crossed his face
His red eyes welling
He hesitated, his gaze passing over
The unfamiliar faces
Each now fixed upon him
‘He said his name was Joe.’
Nice poem. I was expecting it to be about Joe Biden but clearly it wasn’t! Thanks for sharing.
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haha I thought about that when I posted it, but I’m not changing the name because of that loser. Thanks for reading!
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Beautiful (non-rhyming) poem. It reminded me of the years I worked in an Emergency Room. So many homeless people, most of them with smelly feet. We gave them care, but tended to keep contact to minimum. One evening, I struck up a conversation, for some unknown reason, with a homeless man. Maybe it was his sense of humor? By the time he left the ER, I was deeply moved by his story, and I started to remember that “there, but for the grace of God, go I”
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that’s very true. God’s mercy is all around us. You never know where you’ll make a connection, or how, or why. But it’s touching whenever we do. There is so much to be grateful for in our lives.
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