A Swan from Prague
I was  making my way in halfsteps across a bridge 
In that  city of bridges, and met coming my way,
Looking  head-on like a fat white ham with wings,
  A  swan in flight, waist high, at the bridge crest.
I was  inching along as the swan with its yard-long neck
  Towed  its floating midriff in air speeding past.
Lost,  it wanted back to the city’s river,
  A  river with two names in opposing tongues.
I looked  ahead and saw some police laughing
  At  the wings going mad and the paddle-feet tucked.
I could  not remember not being in pain,
  Not  being a man with bone spurs gouging his hip.
In that  city of memorials, among memorials
  Of  immolation and metamorphosis,
I  thought about this place in history—
  I’d  seen the altered road signs from ’68,
I’d  seen the thugs in videos of ’89—
  And  knew for this span of time there was no place.
The  police saw me leaning and halting
  And  turned to watch the swan, as I did,
All  of us grateful to be distracted.
  And I  was sure that they, the laughing police,
Imagined  that whatever my trouble was—drunkenness,
  Disability—it  would take care of itself,
And  that the bird would come to rest again 
  On  the river, the river of clashing names. 
I  told my wife this story, and as a memento
  She  gave me a solid bubble of Czech crystal,
A  lovely blue-headed swan which rides
Now on a shifting river of paper.  
   Carver by the Sea
   Fall Prayer
     A Swan from Prague













