The Haight Street Manifesto
By thumb or bus or scraggly old van
they arrive in droves, escapees from
the Midwest, where no one really wants
to live, school dropouts and teen runaways
on the road, who never read Kerouac,
shadowy spirits of “The Age of Aquarius”
choosing silence, exile and rebellion.
They’re committed to negation, anger
and cunning, loping around town in
backpacks and mildewed leather jackets
studded with steel, tattooed and pierced
through lips, nose and ears.
They don’t mind getting wet
sleeping under stars in the Golden Gate Park.
When Port-O-Sans are locked, they crap
in the bushes, avoiding old panhandlers
who talk to themselves in Korsakoff confusion.
Like Bartleby clones they live by saying:
“I prefer not to.”
Unlike Ben Franklin they never set aside
time to ponder his favorite question:
“What good have I done this day?”
Banished from home they won’t listen to parents
who are out of the loop, whose only advice is:
“Join the army, it will make you a man!”
They’d like old farts to get out of their way
instead of taking up space by living too long,
leaving them broke in a world that stinks
with no air, water or food that’s good anymore.
They’d corral those hobbling around in Boca
and Phoenix, put them to sleep like we do
with our pets.
With eyelids half closed they listlessly wander,
somnambulists surviving on burritos and cheap
Chinese while hungering for bedazzlement.
They have no “to do” lists, mindlessly free
to have shallow conversations hollow
of meaning; they’re funky dead souls in voluntary
exile hoping that anarchy, chemistry and musical
tribalism will prove to be their elixir of transcendence.
Milton P. Ehrlich 199 Christie St. Leonia, N.J. 07605