Christmas Eve
 
                
                            
                        
                            By Bill Berkson
                        
                    
                
                                                                
                            
for Vincent Warren
Behind the black water tower
 under the grey
 
 of the sky that feeds it
 
 smoke speeds to where a pigeon
 
 spreads its wings
 
 This is no great feat
 
 Cold pushes out its lust
 
 We walk we drink we cast
 
 our giggling insults
 
                            Would you please
 
 leave the $2.50 you owe me
 
 I would rather not talk about it
 
 just now           Money bores me I would like
 
 to visit someone who will stay
 
 in bed all day           A forest is rising
 
 imperceptibly in my head
 
                                                   not a civilized park
 
 I think it would be nice this “new
 
 moral odor” no it would not mean
 
 “everything marching to its tomb”
 
                                                             The water tower
 
 watches over us            Is there someone
 
 you would like to invite        no one.
 
                    
                        Bill Berkson, "Christmas Eve" from Portrait and Dream: New and Selected Poems. Copyright © 2009 by Bill Berkson.  Reprinted by permission of Coffee House Press.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        Portrait and Dream: New and Selected Poems
                                                                                                                                                                    (Coffee House Press, 2009)