Identities

One searches roads receding, endlessly receding, receding.
The other opens all doors with the same key.  Simple.

One’s quick to wrath, the wronged, the righteous, the wroth
   kettledrum.
The other loafs by the river, idles and jiggles his line.

One conspired against statues on stilts, in his pocket
The plot that dooms the city. The other’s a good son.

One proclaims he aims to put the first aardvark in space.
The other patiently toils, making saddles for horseless headmen.

One exults as he flexes the glees of his body, up-down, up-down.
The other’s hawk-kite would sail, would soar--who has tied
   it to carrion and bones?

One’s a Tom Fool about money--those pockets are his, with the holes.
At his touch, gold reverts to the base living substance.

The other’s a genius, his holdings increase by binary fission--
Ownings beget their own earnings, dividend without end.

One clasps in a bundle and keens for the broken ten laws.
The other scratches in Ogham the covenant of a moral pagan.

One with alacrity answers to ‘121-45-3628?’--‘Yes, Sir!’  The other
bends his knee, doffs cap, to no man living or dead.  One

Does all his doings predetermined by diskette or disc.
The other draws his dreams through the eye of the moon.

From Beyond Silence: Selected Shorter Poems, 1948–2003 by Daniel Hoffman. Copyright © 2003 by Daniel Hoffman. Reproduced with permission of Louisiana State University Press. All rights reserved.