Statue for Exiles by George Stratigakis

When the Queen Frederica reached New York,

we were at Breakfast in the Salon.

The floor was clear of last night’s

food debris and china shards, and

the deck planks were scrubbed raw

so, their bleached wood fibers stood attentively tall.

The tables had been freed of the coiling ropes

that had kept them from careening into the Salon’s walls.

Disinfectant and stomach smells

floated past the spectral glints

hanging dully off the chandeliers.

All was ready for arrival.

 

Someone popped in his head and called:

You’ll miss the statue!

Another, apparently having passed by before,

Don’t worry. There’s time.

I would have understood,

We’ve arrived, and would’ve run

to be present and waiting

at this rare meeting of archetypal Forms.

 

On deck, we stood mesmerized

while thousands of squares

set into concrete vertical slabs

floated past rigid and lifeless

which only now I know testified

to Protestant Will—canyon sides

of compressed and structured sand

and no color anywhere.

And in the distance behind,

in the haze we’d just passed through,

gray as if in a cocoon a figure stood

holding something over its head.

-Published In the Tipton Poetry Journal Winter-Spring Issue 2013