(Poem) Labor Day: Thank Your Local Fire Hydrant

Hey, it’s Labor Day!
The day we dance
So that we can dance
With no hard work
With no off-timed
Time-offs
No pied piper to pay
No
I would rather consume
A windsill pie
A breeze that wipes my forehead
In the remaining heat
Dropping promises
Of autumn juices
So sweet
Swapping the bitter times
For bitter drinks
So today
Why not get your kid
Bring them to the roller rink
And skate in figure
Can’t be late to work
8:00 coffee + mornings hate
And turn that into
A spark of fate
As on a walk
You turn a corner
And spot the true hero of today’s holiday:
The American fire hydrant.
Indeed, while some may look more washed-out than others,
What you don’t take from your first impression of these marvellous machines, which contain the potential for volatile explosions of H2O, which provide a municipal necessity for firefighters, which stand there solid like a sentinel of steel watching majestically over the street, like an oddly-shaped, abstract, garden gnome that belongs to the garden of nobody, comes mostly in cherry, lemon, grape, and mystery flavors, are the flagship graffitti tagging-grounds for the piss of our beloved canine companions, jut out haphazardly in the concrete jungle, become sources of water-blasting entertainment for booming block parties gone rogue, are the enemy of Pac-Man, are connoted with both justices of modern-day firefighting as much as historical injustices of violence in the Civil Rights period, whose official mascot is named Pluggie, are what make cities look like cities, make a lowercase t-shape, might look good in a sweater and a beanie, and sometimes, a little like there’s just a little too much…shaft exposed?
I love them; they make me sick.
That’s why we get the day: to gaze at those delightful and dreadful red rods of spray
Gushing water pumped freely
From water towers that
Look poised to blast off to the moon
Like an extra-terrestrial spacecraft
Yes,
Today I am free today
No labor, just love.
Labor? That’s not for me.
A dollar a day? Not today.
My boss is out to lunch; today, I’m staying in
Looking peacefully out a window
Dreaming up an epigraph:
THANK YOU FIRE HYDRANTS
FOR ALL YOUR HARD WORK

Thanks for reading! You can opt in for further blog updates from (In)Sitze by subscribing to the Newsletter below.
