Downtown

Frederick Seidel
FSG Poetry Month / Daily Poem

July 4th fireworks exhale over the Hudson sadly.
It is beautiful that they have to disappear.
It’s like the time you said I love you madly.
That was an hour ago. It’s been a fervent year.
I don’t really love fireworks, not really, the flavorful floating shroud
In the nighttime sky above the river and the crowd.
This time, because of the distance upriver perhaps, they’re not loud,
Even the colors aren’t, the patterns getting pregnant and popping.
They get bigger and louder when they start stopping.
They try to rally
At the finale.
It’s the four-hundredth anniversary of Henry Hudson’s discovery—
Which is why the fireworks happen on this side of the island this year.
Shad are back, and we celebrate the Hudson’s Clean Water Act recovery.
What a joy to eat the unborn. We’re monsters, I fear. What monsters we’re.
We’ll binge on shad roe next spring in the delicious few minutes it’s here.

 

‘Downtown’ is excerpted from Nice Weather.

Chosen for FSG Poetry Month by Sebastian Sarti.
Frederick Seidel’s many books of poems include The Cosmos Trilogy, Ooga-Booga, and Poems 1959–2009, all published by FSG. He lives in New York City.


 

 


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