Poem of the Week, by Jeffrey Harrison

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Renewal

- Jeffrey Harrison


At the Department of Motor Vehicles

to renew my driver’s license, I had to wait

two hours on one of those wooden benches

like pews in the church of Latter Day

Meaninglessness, where there is no

stained glass (no windows at all, in fact),

no incense other than stale cigarette smoke

emanating from the clothes of those around me,

and no sermon, just an automated female voice

calling numbers over a loudspeaker.

And one by one the members of our sorry

congregation shuffled meekly up to the pitted

altar to have our vision tested or to seek

redemption for whatever wrong turn we’d taken,

or pay indulgences, or else be turned away

as unworthy of piloting our own journey.

But when I paused to look around, using my numbered

ticket as a bookmark, it was as if the dim

fluorescent light had been transformed

to incandescence. The face of the Latino guy

in a ripped black sweatshirt glowed with health,

and I could tell that the sulking white girl

accompanied by her mother was brimming

with secret excitement to be getting her first license,

already speeding down the highway, alone,

with all the windows open, singing.

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Published on April 19, 2014 05:26
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