Sunday, December 12, 2010

Architecture



I look at houses.

I like their solidarity, shoulder to shoulder

rising over the streets

in waves of sturdy architecture

that fix the undulating landscape

into orderly cross-hatched blocks.


Even the lordly peaks that sit like

wooded islands in this regimental sea

harbor stragglers tucked along each ridge

in loose formation, alternating ranks

with eucalyptus trees until they disappear

into the swallowing fog.


I walk between the lines of walls

lifting my eyes to the angularity

of rooftops against the sky. I take in

the haphazard milk-spill clouds

in a single glance before my eyes

return to their caress of a cornice scroll

or ornamental molding.


Four walls support a roof to make a shelter,

a basic truth grasped so young

that even simple block on block towers

teetering under the clumsy build of childish hands

freely elaborate upon that plan.


I like the curve and jut of

porches, bays, gables, balconies,

pointed turrets, colonnaded arches,

the nubbly texture of stucco walls and

weathered wooden shingles. I like the

dramatic flair of crisply articulated designs

picked out in newly painted colors

and the worn endurance of faded peeling paint.


I look at windows, the blank and staring

rectangular standard for every house, and

see most often drawn shades or lacy curtains,

maybe a cat perched upon the sill.

Upper stories more confident

of their distance from the street may

brazenly show off a plant or dangling ceiling fixture

behind open shades, but even there

the blandly dark interiors recede from view

in contrast to embellished facades.


At night the roles reverse as brilliant

windows awaken lifeless dusky walls

to reveal a multitude of residents

sharing a common myth of privacy

when close enough to hear each other's voices

and smell what's cooking on another stove.


I look out at a ground covered with stars

whose glow bleeds upward to the sky

and think how many stories

lie framed inside these windowpanes.

In this bedroom lovers

quench the fury of their need.

Next door a daughter tells hurried lies

into a phone jammed between shoulder and ear.

In his kitchen a man reaches into a barren fridge

for a beer to wash down today's demise

while one floor below an aging couple

move in tandem lifting chopsticks to their lips.


In my own home I flick on the switch,

a momentary spotlight on my body

as I gather closed the drapes and make

my window another anonymous light

three floors above the street. I lie down

and hear the television from next door below

and footsteps striding purposefully

around the flat beneath. Sheltered

within the walls that set me apart

from strangers I call neighbors

I share with them the contract

built into such houses

where windows open onto walls.