THE BROWN BAGGER

In the winter mornings before he woke the children,

reset the alarm another fifteen minutes for his wife to sleep,

he dressed quickly and hurried into the kitchen

to paste together a sandwich of peanut butter and jelly,

or bologna, butter and a cheese slice, grabbed an apple,

and filled a small container of cereal to snack,

before hurrying down the steep hill to the bus stop

for the trip downtown in the huddled silence

of strangers, hats pulled over their ears

In the twenty minutes he was granted to swallow his lunch

he watched the upper crust leave the office early, return late,

laughing, smelling of three martini meals in paneled taverns,

flinging off scarves and overcoats back onto racks, ruffling papers,

shouting orders, gathering for coffee and more chit-chat

He skipped the elevator for the stairs, marched up the dark street

to his little house, grabbed his tools and fixed a furnace register,

changed bulbs, sweated over bills, worried his children needed

fixing too but didn’t know how to make them right according to

his hopes for them at birth

He used the same sacks until they fell apart, until he could

heat some soup, grill toast and cheese, read the paper

at the kitchen table while his wife napped on the sofa,

after the kids disappeared to places in the National Geographic

he visited at the public library where the A/C was always on