. the street
lamp .
Once upon a time there was a street lamp who was lonely and looked out onto
the world. The streets he hovered over were decayed and broken. Every so often
he could hear a foghorn blow, and although he couldn't see them, a few blocks
away, ferries, tugboats and carriers all sloshed through the river, manifesting
their ant-like existence. The marsh reeds along the shore swayed in the wind
at dusk - its surrounding water metallically luminescent with oil and otherwise
a fluorescent green.
The street lamp had been there before most of the buildings had been raised.
In his golden days, he had been a patriarch, the wise one, the one everyone
turned to for answers. Partially because of the omniscience his height granted
him, but also because he was the first the winged messengers from afar would
confide in. Besides, the buildings were much too busy, cradling packs of people
into their wombs. The sidewalks and moss that grew between them were often at
war, the cars came and went, and the litter had too short of a life span, and
always blew away in the wind.
Birds used to roost on the street lamp, but this was no longer true, because
the street lamp wasn't as sturdy in his old age. He hobbled even as he stood,
against the wind, against time. Sometimes, he talked with the trees. In his
bolder years, he had laughed at them when they were shaven and shorn because
they grew their hairs too long, too long for the telephone wires.
Even though he had laughed, secretly the street lamp loved everyone.
The birds stopped telling him news from afar, because the street lamp could
no longer hear them.
One day, his bulb burnt out. He could no longer see. A few apples remarked on
it as they passed by in baskets people carried. Weeks later, some workers came.
They blasted the concrete around him, and unscrewed the screws at his base.
Now he was more rickety than ever. Someone mentioned that his wires had burnt
out. Slowly, they tilted him and loaded him onto a truck. The street lamp didn't
even get to glimpse his beloved neighborhood before the truck sped off, for
the scrapyard.
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