sub-urban
photography by man of aran
Sub-urban prayer The last thing I noticed about the man in the little plaza with a fountain in front of the local library was how, when he sat down on a bench, his pant legs rode up to reveal not just socks, which looked to be of a thick grey wool, but also, now protruding, a layer beneath— that is, the bottoms of a second pair of trousers. Before that, with the book he was clutching, not reading, his eyes fixed on the fountain’s rhythmic pulse, rising and falling, he was just another library patron out for some sunshine, one small difference being his ensemble—suit, tie, Oxfords— all together slightly rumpled, but not overly so, making him appear, on that sunny suburban Saturday afternoon, somewhat overdressed, not to say eccentric. I did not expect he would be crossing my mind that evening—if at all, no more than an idle thought, say, whether the book he was holding was one I might read, too, that we might share an interest, or what he might have seen in the waters of the fountain, nothing much more that, certainly not to find myself returning in wonder—to wonder how far we each must walk on our own winding paths, and how tenuously touched we each might be by the thing nearest grace.




It’s the kind of poem that sneaks up on you. At first, it’s just a quiet scene — a man on a bench, a fountain, a book he isn’t really reading. But the small details, like the second pair of trousers, make him suddenly feel fragile and strangely memorable. What moved me most is how the narrator only realizes later that the moment stayed with him. There’s something tender in that — the way a stranger can open a small window into our own thoughts without ever knowing it. The poem turns that simple encounter into a reflection on how little we understand about the paths others walk. And by the end, it leaves you with this soft, lingering sense of how grace, or whatever we choose to call it, touches us in the quietest ways.
Beautiful