Dog Weather, Stephen Dunn

Dog Weather
Stephen Dunn

Earlier, everyone was in knee boots, collars up.
The paper boy’s papers came apart
in the wind.

Now, nothing human moving.
Just a black squirrel fidgeting like Bogart
in The Caine Mutiny.

My breath chalks the window,
gives me away to myself.

I like the intelligibility of old songs.
I prefer yesterday.

Cars pass, the asphalt’s on its back
smudged with skid. It’s potholed
and cracked; it’s no damn good.

Anyone out without the excuse of a dog
should be handcuffed
and searched for loneliness.

My hair is thinning.
I feel like tossing the wind a stick.

The promised snow has arrived,
heavy, wet.
I remember the blizzard of…
People I don’t want to be
speak like that.

I close my eyes and one
of my many unborn sons
makes a snowball
and lofts it at an unborn friend.

They’ve sent me an AARP card.
I’m on their list.

I can be discounted now almost anywhere.