The Guy on the Train

Martha Strom

do you ever feel

like just giving up?

cooed a voice in my head

you can give up now

but it was time

to go to the pool,

the last time slot of the day

you will begin

a slow slide

toward easeful death

i wanted to call my friend

the one who seems so sad

do you ever feel

like just giving up?

i would say

i stood in the plastic bus stop

and next to the plastic wind shield

a fat gray quite lovely pigeon--

was it asleep? or dead?

the pigeon looked clean

and beautiful but dead

a lady on her cell phone

came by and kicked it

as if to question, dead? or asleep?

and walked on, talked on--

won’t somebody please

help me, cries the guy

on the train

 

Martha Strom received a Phi Beta Kappa key when she graduated with Distinction in English from Boston University. Soon afterwards, she earned a M.A. and a Ph.D. in English Literature from Princeton. (That was during the first decade of women at Princeton.) Later, she taught English and Writing at Princeton, Brandeis, and Harvard, before moving to New York where she taught Adults with Psychiatric Disabilities; and ESL at Pace University. Now, she writes and lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Read more poems by Martha Strom here →