poem29 Jan 2018 08:00 am
We had reservations,
luckily made months in advance;
even our inferior hostelry was filled.
Everyone wanted to visit the place
before it was too late. Some tourists
who expected lodging to be available
had meltdowns right there in the dank
lobby. We spent the debased currency
as if it were water, but icy native eyes
followed us with hostility, even though
we learned a common local greeting
(which translated roughly as Repent—
the end is near). Their famed arcades
appeared smaller than the guidebooks’
gushing descriptions, and the details
oddly rounded, compared to earlier
photos. Uncooperative guards would
not let us climb gleaming staircases
(Slippery When Wet signs impeded us
everywhere), nor allow us to set foot on
translucent bridges, even when offered
lavish bribes. Ancient statues of crystal
seemed to have shrunk and smoothed
further each time we passed by them.
Everywhere, deepening puddles lapped
at our ankles, and we shivered despite
the crowds in whose warmth we nestled.
We complained loudly about the dearth
of portable heaters, the dampness, plus
the lack of authentic restorations, and
asked them why they could not simply
move their planet further from its sun.
Illustration is By Giovanni Boldini – Dorotheum, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=18993859
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