The Tower

Five, six chairs piled up in the yard

And you on top of them

Sitting like a hanging judge,

Wearing only pajama bottoms.

 

The sparrows, what must they think?

If people are watching,

They are as quiet as goldfish,

Or expensive cuts of meat.

 

Hour after hour alone with the sky

And its mad serenity

On the rickety, already teetering,

Already leaning tower.

 

How frightened the neighbors must be.

Not even a child walks the streets

In this heat,

Not even a car passes and slows down.

 

What do you see in the distance, O father?

A windowpane struck by the setting sun?

A game called on account of darkness?

The players like fleas in a convent.

 

Hell’s bells about to toll?