EDWARD HIRSCH

The Custodian

FROM The Atlantic

Sometimes I think I have lived

My whole life like that old janitor

Who locked up after the rabbi

And patrolled the synagogue at night.

He never learned the Hebrew prayers,

Which he hummed under his breath

As he folded the soiled tallises

And stacked the skullcaps into piles.

He opened the Holy Ark by hand

And dusted off the sacred scrolls,

O Lord, which he never opened,

And cut the light behind the organ.

He ignored the Eternal Lamp

(Woe to the worker who unplugged it!),

As he vacuumed the House of Prayer

Muddied by the congregation.

Not for him the heavenly choir music

Or the bearded sermon handed down

From the lectern, though stars squinted

Through the stained-glass windows.

Every now and then he’d sigh

And stare up at the domed ceiling

As if he had heard something auspicious,

But it was only the wind in the trees.

He picked a prayer book off the floor

And carried it down to the basement,

Where he chewed on a sandwich

And listened to a ballgame on the radio.