Poor Fish
I saw the loser in 3-card Monte
pleading with the cat who ran the game:
You’ll give me my fifty back, won’t you?
Yesterday payday, rent today.
It’s only fair, chance is unjust,
and this can’t be happening to me,
can it? But above the avenue’s rich rug
the cards continued changing places,
continued slicking through the dealer’s practiced hands,
his dry eye out only for the police.
No one looking on or moving along
took the victim’s part. Where in our
lapsed world do marks find pity?
Pity goes to animals, who can’t help it,
and who try hard to stay away from us
unless a bright prospect entices them,
a lure for innocents. Like the pickerel
I caught who looked at me. Mutely
it beseeched me in the name of all that’s holy
to save it. I ate it, soul and body.
But the hooked man, poor fish, voiced
his complaint and plea, for all the good that did him,
as I heard his cries grow fainter as I swam into
the shadows of towers dangling their lighted suites.