Putting my lenses in, I see No Man’s Land in the mirror—
Which makes me think of times in Tokyo so long ago 
When, on some subway station platform, in a crowd,
Not finding a single person who spoke English
To ask how I could get to somewhere,
For a panicked several minutes 
I experienced near-weightlessness and something quite like bliss.

Once, in India, I crossed a midday plaza—
This was Mumbai, then still called Bombay—
And there were maybe 25,000 people, myself the only white,
And no one in the mob of brown giving me a thought.
I walked invisibly through the Indian indifference.
I crossed across the packed brown Bombay busyness—
A man who wanted to be No Man’s Land, free at last.

Now listen, do the right thing, you’re a gentleman, be a gentleman.
Empty yourself of meaning
And be a man without ideas.
I went from Bali to Bombay, already sick with something,
From Bombay to Cairo, getting sicker. 
Next, on to Tehran, where rooms constantly tilted.
Ah, Shireen, one-night stand of the Shah, looking as if