After a Caravaggio Painting
We live in a city of weeping houses,
dogs howl, cats are skinny,
paint peels, times are hard.
Our souls reside in the dollar store,
we work and borrow monthly
to pay our debt.
What do we owe?
Gamblers continue to gamble
even after the light shines
on the exchange of coins.
Who exchanges the solid for the light,
the light for the holy shine,
the shine that reveals the price tags,
the sale signs?
It’s past midnight,
the next day has cracked,
the city loud with the cawing
of cars and the old fashioned gurgle
of a polluted lake. See how we turn
towards the lake then away.
We live
in a city of weeping.
Our faces, scarred by the light
that resides in the coins,
the coins that cast their light up
towards the faces, tell me,
what do we owe?
To hear
the waves claw the polluted lake
and the dogs gurgle, to see
a hand point toward
that one face in the light,
the way the light is torn,
the turning again and again
towards the coin, faces lit up,
irritated, by all that we owe.
Sarah C. Harwell has had poems published in various journals including Poetry, TriQuarterly, Stone Canoe and Margie. She is one of the featured poets in Three New Poets published by Sheep Meadow Press, 2006. She has worked as a bed and breakfast hostess, librarian, natural language processor and telephone psychic, and is utilizing many of those skills in her current job as coordinator and instructor in Syracuse University’s Creative Writing MFA program. She lives in Syracuse with her daughter and cat.
Photograph accompanying poem, “Night Shift,” by Bob Gates.



