Friday, January 1, 2021

From a Diary of the Plague Year (20)

Masked, we stand like sentries.
In line six feet apart at
our local post office. 

At the counter, postal
clerks query clients, shuffle
forms, tease computer

screens, and explain.
And explain. Their knowledge
and patience are gnostic.

They meet miffed 
remarks with measured
words, weighing them

like a package bound
for anywhere on the planet.
Older ones of us

in line may see 
the Post Office as sacred.
May have lived on rural

routes or in micro-towns.
The world got in touch
with us through the Post

Office. Some may have
dabbled secretly in 
philately. Or corresponded

with St. Nick. Or ordered
a baseball glove or a doll
from a catalogue as thick

as an oak stump. We 
do not know why a crowd
in power wants to wreck

this secular temple. Weary,
always mocked, the post office
is, like a library or a free

clinic, the kind of institution
that saves civilization, 
as drops of rain eventually

save crops. Which is why,
in line and masked, holding
boxes and plump 

envelopes, we accept
the wait
with everyday grace. 

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