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Travel Poem – Prague By Night

Prague from Powder Tower, with Our Lady before Týn, St. Nicolas ***Jiuguang Wang***

 

 

Prague By Night

 

Patchouli oil and the scent of your travel hair,

our smaller days middle-aged and measured

by hotel soaps that come in gold foil

wrappers like they’re something special.

 

You say one European city is like another. 

Scientists say somewhere in space

exist colors we’ve never seen.

When we make love in the hotel room

 

in Prague, I close my eyes

and try to think about you instead of

those colors and if we’ll see them

like some kind of reward when we die.

 

Yesterday we went to Kafka’s house.

He died of starvation in a hospital before

intravenous feeding was invented, 

not in a ghetto or concentration camp 

 

like his sisters Ottla, Elli, and Valli.

At the breakfast buffet today

I took extra bread and cheese

to make sandwiches for lunch.

 

I wasn’t hungry and slipping

them in a plastic bag felt like stealing.

I surprised myself with petty satisfaction.

I thought about Kafka and his sisters 

 

as we ate the sandwiches sitting on the steps

of St. Giles Church. Inside, baroque gold angels

bored with God, cavort half-nude in gilded heavens 

where they hoard their gold and ignore us.

 

 

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