On the Bus

Emily Tian

The man sitting over there, 

the one going bald, with a soft belly,

how was he to know he would lose

the face everyone kept pictures of? 

He keeps some of his own,

each a sort of surrogate mother from which

he tells himself about himself. 

When he was young he liked to work

with his hands: he thought it important

to touch the earth and good

to burn the back of his neck. 

He would come home to a pot of soaked beans, 

old papers knobbed with blue paint … 

he has to guess the rest, filling in

what must have thrilled him,

what people said without his knowing. 

Recently, he was just about knocked over 

trying to tabulate the hours

spent in bed, sitting over the toilet,

vacuuming the floor, waiting for friends —

so as to cut them loose and

look for the hard black kernel of life.