The city pulsates,
bursting in a glorious cacophony;
Truck horns blaring their condescension as
Gothic, Art Nouveau and
Victorian buildings spectate;
Buildings thrown together like the misfits
of New York City populace.
I come from a city of car exhaust and
cigar smoke that lines the
entrances of canopies and foliage;
I am the halal cart greeting you
in front of the Natural History Museum;
the Oak trees in Central Park,
the homeless on the bench;
the runner in the bike lane;
The light at 4 a.m.
bursting in a glorious cacophony;
Truck horns blaring their condescension as
Gothic, Art Nouveau and
Victorian buildings spectate;
Buildings thrown together like the misfits
of New York City populace.
I come from a city of car exhaust and
cigar smoke that lines the
entrances of canopies and foliage;
I am the halal cart greeting you
in front of the Natural History Museum;
the Oak trees in Central Park,
the homeless on the bench;
the runner in the bike lane;
The light at 4 a.m.