Experience on a city bus. |
On the City Bus On the city bus. I haven't been on a city bus In over thirty years. Aisles seem a bit wider, But maybe not. Bench seats Look pretty much the same. Windows, I know, are larger, Wider, higher panes of glass, Tinted too. Didn't have the Sun-shielding tinted kind Years ago when I use to ride. Even the riders look the same As those I remember--old people, Young people, all colors and sizes, Well-dressed and not, a rainbow Array of faces all hiding their eyes With glassy stares out the window, Unblinking eyes looking straight Ahead into the forever aisles of outer space. The driver could be his father's father Who has been driving buses and calling Out street names ever since the time When horses pulled street cars on rails. On the city bus words are guarded as pearls Saved only for responding when spoken to. One man mumbles to himself, talking to Someone close in his mind's imagining. Those nearby look off elsewhere, off into the imaginary miles beyond. I haven't been On a city bus in over thirty years. Since then, I have aged considerably, But the other riders, they never seem To change. It could be 1976 all over Again for all I know, except for the Tinted windows, of course, with wider, Higher, sun-shielding double-glazed panes Where the eyes inside get a smoky view of the city passing by. Through them, I imagine seeing for miles and miles beyond. |