Samuel John Hazo
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Samuel John Hazo
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Biography
Curriculum Vitae
International Poetry Forum
Selected Poetry
Books
Media
Videos
Gallery
Contact
FLORENCE BY PROXY
October’s ochre changes
everything to Italy.
Sunpainted
walls remember villas
from Fiesole.
I’ve never seen
Fiesole.
Someday I will,
and it will seem a memory
of noon in the United States
when I became a Florentine
because the sun bewildered me.
Who among the Florentines
is listening?
Who else but me
who sees in the Italians
“the human race” that Goethe
saw…
Today their cops
are commodore; their Fiats,
weapons in their whizzing duels
on the road; their shoes and gloves,
the very renaissance of calf.
Tribal to the death, they swear
by their mothers, breastfeed
their sons wherever, prefer
their pasta three-fourths cooked,
and sing whatever, whenever…
Mistaken for Italian half
my life, I’m of the tribe.
If it’s Italian to speak
in tears before goodbyes,
I qualify.
If it’s Italian
to choose tomatoes one
by one, I qualify.
If it’s
Italian to laugh when no one
else is laughing or to whistle
at the wheel, I qualify.
One
murmur in Italian soothes
the Florentine in me that French
confuses, German contradicts,
and Spanish misses by a hair.
One murmur, and I feel
what Goethe felt when Florence
wounded him with Italy
for life though Goethe spent
not quite three hours there.
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