Gary Lebel
Miami Notes
‘ . . . it is a privilege to see so
much confusion.”
Marianne Moore, The Steeple-Jack
1. Impresst
When the tour bus passed the villas of multi-millionaires along the shores of Indian Creek and the bows of their sleek white yachts cut the water like knives
I was not impressed.
For the famed boutiques in South Beach where impressionable young women in their long summer dresses and sea-blown hair paused to photograph themselves in front of ‘DASH’ and ‘GUCCI’ with their smartphones
there was no rise in my pulse.
As armies of the well-fed sprawled in their white lounge chairs round a bright emerald pool beneath the soft swish of palm leaves at a high end resort
I watched the eyebrows of the art deco buildings across the street lift at the irony.
But late in the day in Little Havana, a very old man looked up at me from where he was sitting as I walked by. He gave me his hand and I stopped and took it: it was chapped and leathery from years of labor, tough but smooth as a woman’s purse, its grip strong with the enduring smile that must have leapt up from his heart. He spoke to me warmly as if he were greeting an old friend while pulling me closer to look into my eyes. Though his words were a flock of sparrows, I caught a few in my net,
and there in the leveling heat of a mid July day with the lingering taste of café cubano sweet on my tongue,
with a flood of congas bursting from smoke shops, sidewalk cafés and ragtops as if to tell us that life itself is an invitation to the dance,
at last,
I was impressed.
O hear them cry through a crack in dream's door, the poor, the beaten, the lame, the long-ago children marched barefoot in rags through the hard, ecumenical rain . . .
2. As Usual
the boulevard’s aswing with music a summer noon men and women in Gomez Park playing checkers chess socializing laughing jesting flirting the sun beating down on los hijos del sol art on the lampposts on the sides of buildings over stucco and brick imágenes on the fencing round empty lots in the immaculate windows of trim white galleries bold and feisty colors in two dimensions with their toes curling round the cliff-edge of three
and a hunched old man smallboned & frail in flannel and jeans head of silver bent over
shoulders kept upright by the palms of younger men sitting beside him on the park bench
pouring hope into his ears whilea fourth looks on standing worried & anguished phone to his lips talking talking talking
till the ambulance arrives & its attendants lift him gently ever-so-gently (swaddled in those clean white sheets how small and frail the stretcher frames him) and the siren cuts from the hour the minute
that whisks him away
and the board games continue the Afro-Cuban music the mellifluous machineguns of language
as traffic moves on haltingly to the slow graceless waltz of the stoplights on the boulevard
and I wonder
whose husband whose father whose grandfather whose uncle whose brother whose cousin whose friend?
while in Pequeño Habana
life goes on
life as usual
goes on
As if the sea's salt-winds had traced a winding estuary to deliver it, the call to be better
About the Author
Gary LeBel is an artist-poet living in the greater Atlanta area whose poems have appeared in journals throughout the USA, the UK, Japan, and India. He believes that art, or anything else worth doing, is a life-long pilgrimage.