Michael Salcman

MEMORIES OF JERRY

During the pandemic I channel surfed

into where they still made money

running Law & Order twelve hours a day,

sponsored by “free” packets of miracle spring water.

I remember right away a repeat episode from 1991 

about a young mother killing her child “out of love,”

as if burning the body of an eight-monthold baby

in a basement furnace would guarantee life eternal

in a better place than this sewer of a city.

 

Urban complaint was her main defense

reciting a familiar list in the witness box:

drug gang shootings, race riots, the rape of a friend, 

and a blind sheik’s practice run at bringing down

the Twin Towers a decade before they actually fell.

 

The same year as the burnt baby, in the city I loved

my wife and I were eating alone in a mid-town restaurant when

a familiar baritone at the next table turned my head around.

It was Jerry Orbach and his wife sitting with another couple

after a night on the town. Take my word,

El Gallo in life sounded the same as he does on the tube,

New York everywhere in his mouth.

 

I’m half way up, hoping to say “Hi” and get an autograph

when the wife puts an arm on me, saying I’m not rude enough

to stare so hard at Detective Briscoe or bother him walking over.

My small balloon of energy instantly pops

and ever since his death, I’ve tried not to remember

one more wasted moment when I caved on desire.

MICHAEL SALCMAN: poet, retired physician and art historian, was born in Pilsen Czechoslovakia. He trained in brain surgery at Columbia’s Neurological Institute. He is the author of 200 scientific articles and six medical books. He served as chairman of neurosurgery at the University of Maryland and president of the Contemporary Museum in Baltimore. He lectures widely about art and the brain. Among many other journals his poems appear in Alaska Quarterly Review, Arts & Letters, The Café Review, Harvard Review, Hopkins Review, The Hudson Review, New Letters, Notre Dame Review, Ontario Review, Panygyrus, Poet Lore, Raritan and Solstice. Featured on Poetry Daily, Verse Daily and All Things Considered, his work has received six nominations for a Pushcart Prize... Full Profile