1 minute read
Stephen Jackson The Old Neighborhood
The Old Neighborhood
There are pockets left, I may turn a corner to find the stage set
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fully intact, the actors, or should I say players, have all exited, gone—
since the dozers came to disassemble the stages where once we pined
—still, a line will come, long since stuck at the back of my mind,
then I hear laughter gather in the rustle of leaves, dappled sun
like stage lights upon memories of when we’d sit outside hip cafés,
acting like our days or lives might go on forever, never expecting
the twist near the end —the convoluted plot that returns me now
to these lots, finds me strutting—then fretting, an audience of one.
Stephen Jackson
Stephen Jackson lives and writes in the Pacific Northwest. Other work has appeared in The American Journal of Poetry, FERAL: A Journal of Poetry and Art, Hole in the Head Review, and others.