Hudson River
By Holly Guran
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the Hudson has a magnet smell
dark water railroad track
spongy grass
rocks scattered wrappers tossed
the Hudson has a railroad depot
abandoned revived
a party for
a cousin turning eighty
the freight trains go by
a long chain clanging
guests turn not hearing
each other the roar subsides
stranger beside me
remembers Johnny Mathis
and I do yes Chances Are
didn’t sex send sparks
we compare he saw Miles at a dive
I saw Ahmad Jamal come what may
his Poinsiana I’ll learn
to love forever
he loves certain lyrics
a guide on how to live
four years
since his wife died
he leaves keeps returning
his pressing need
for the forgotten prelude
to Hello Young Lovers
and then he has it
when the earth smelled of summer
and the river
and the sky was streaked with white
we sing beyond us
the huge barge of trash
pushed by a small tugboat
navigates the Hudson
– Holly Guran
Author’s Note: The Hudson River that flowed below my childhood home, the high school I attended, and my close relatives’ town is always a force in my work. Often, our family members are born or die not far from the Hudson’s banks. For the presence of this wide river in much of my life, I am grateful.