Self-Portrait
By Ira Sadoff
I sniff after the sparrow and the spaniel, flitting around,
barking, digging up the dirt: how could I not be
at one with them? But I’m a spendthrift too, rummaging about
old sport coats, selecting a style, a clash of styles—
in a private moment trying to decide who I am today by trying on
something discarded, something nobody treasured—
I think I want everyone and everything to be loved so much
I get dour, chastising, dark, and sometimes hate
so much I can’t go for a stroll without recycling the moment
they dropped acid on my palm, the thousand ways I could ease
their demise—dipping them into a river of invective
that seems futile and enticing—whether it’s the Secretary of State
or a species of white shirts and thin black ties who exude smugness,
who quote from the bible as if it were the Bible. It’s like having an affair—
they all end badly, don’t they?—thereby the passion flies out of me
like an open window in February: take the heat, world,
disperse it before I undress another thought.