Dragons by Devin Johnston
Author:Devin Johnston
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
AT FIFTY: A LETTER
On Saturday morning, feeling fit,
I set out on a five-mile race
that starts and ends at Grace Court.
Summer has not yet relented,
here in mid-September,
but I found my rhythm easily,
moving downhill without pressure
through shadows, over fallen leaves,
among the breathing runners.
When I hit the three-mile mark
at the bottom of Old Salem,
my stopwatch read 22:10.
The course then climbed a long hill
on the new strollway beside Main;
then down, and up again
on First Street by the Rainbow
and Modern Chevrolet.
There I walked for ten seconds.
Redacted, blank, an interval
of who knows what duration â¦
I found myself sitting on a curb
trying hard not to pass out,
a fuzz of static in my brain.
As runners strode by, hands on hips,
I realized I was past the finish
clutching a small stick
with a very large number on it.
Police appeared with a cup of ice
and only left on my insistence
I felt better. But then the sun
came out from behind a cloud
and I worried that I couldnât move
myself into the shade.
With a wave, I stopped a passerby
and asked for a hand, my speech slurred.
She guided me to an open hydrant
where I could cool my head.
Eventually I got to my feet
and tottered home, recovered some,
went to the mountain, and took a nap.
When I awoke, I remembered crossing
the finish line, but without strength
to walk through the chute and take my stick.
I glimpsed someone in front of me
I took to be your uncle Dave,
unlikely as that sounds:
the same long energetic stride,
the same shaved neck and slight stoop.
When I tried to call him, I said Dev!
while realizing it wasnât you,
and so corrected myself to Dave!
Walking away, he turned to his friend
and muttered, He seems a bit confused.
I must have stood stock-still for minutes
before I staggered through the crowd.
It was like a stroke, but heatstroke
from not pausing at the water stops.
Remembering my foolishness
at the curb, as you might touch
a bruise to test its tenderness,
I sank into depression.
As usual, this spread
to every level of my life
for ten minutes, then I pushed back
from such thoughts. Iâm fine now.
I hope you are enjoying school
and working through the Odyssey
with all its detours and digressions.
Iâd rather you be there
(dozing in your carrel
behind a palisade of books)
than helping me through the gate.
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