Traveling On Credit, by DANIEL HALPERN
They would think up trips on Sundays--
Traveling to Lahore via Persia,
Sliding through the Khyber Pass,
Dropping into India like Polo.
The trips began off Fire Island
On a beach day with high red winds,
Swimming nude in South Bay
Together. The residents looked away,
Cared for their gardens which suffered
From the whip of the salt wind
And the Patchogians, who
Came with bayberry sandwiches
To hawk their bodies in the sun
And hurry back on the last
Watch Hill ferry. They lived
In Bayberry and thought up trips
With the marina’s population
(A Calcutta of boats)
Looking on from polished wood.
They were, for the most part, in love,
Traveling. Sundays, to Lahore
In three cars with two wolfhounds,
Four afghans and a setter--
A Packard, a Daimler and a Ford.
They were set on Lahore:
Stops in Izmir and Isfahan,
The long crawl through Persia.
On Sundays, in fine weather,
They set out with a pocketful
Of visas and rolled east, content
With itineraries of sand
And postcards back on the weekend.
From “Daniel Halpern: Selected Poems” by Daniel Halpern. (Knopf: $23.) 1994 Reprinted by permission.
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