I’ve been told not to hand a dollar

or a twenty out a car window

to a man on a corner by a stop light

holding up a scribbled cardboard sign

 

His scattered oily hair, yellow skin,

clouded eyes, unsettle me

Conventional wisdom dictates

he’ll just buy booze or drugs

 

On another corner on my way walking

past a fast food joint three young

black ladies stand jiving, jangling coins

in used paper cups and I say,

“I only give to organized charities,”

 

but the liveliest holds up her cup and grins,

“Hey, mister, I am an organized charity!”

 

She too is nondeductible as I was

on late July nights after escaping

my family home at seventeen

from a crazy father and learned

to toss on the boards of park benches

and the cushions of a front porch glider

at the house of an old high school friend

who took a chance, woke me before dawn

so his parents would not find me asleep

 

I don’t remember saying, “Thank you,” only

having him send me forth quiet and confused

into the hazy morning

 

Must be an instinct, the theology of eyes,

to stick a hand through air to another’s hand

stained with loss, dirt and pain