BROOM MAN
The broom man
sweeps up each day
in front of the library—
dreams, hopes, brushed together
with leaves and candy wrappers.
Carrying his broom like a scabbard,
he is a guard at the entrance
of some dark journey.
At night
he sleeps
curled around it on the pavement,
as if it were his wife.
When the sun rises,
he stands up
adjusts his baggy clothes,
begins his ritual again,
sweeping,
sweeping,
first near the door,
the book drop,
then out
to the gutter.
His work is never done.
Today
I passed him
and heard a woman
speak to him,
almost with respect
in her voice.
Doubled over the broom,
he suddenly looked up,
and
a glow seemed to surround
this brown broom man.
And in a shaft of light
I thought I saw him
mount the broom
as if it were a steed,
and rise above
the dirt,
the concrete,
his city of broken glass.
What a beautiful poignant poem. I love it!