|
|
Boston (Free verse) by Dovina
Winged skulls carved in slate,
Colonistsâ gravestones leaning, marred,
Cradle of independence,
The baby grown old.
Sounds of horns and motors
Far below an conditioned room,
Charles River bearing remains of fallen nightâ
Fastfood boxes,
Butts of smoking bans,
Condoms of success and failure,
Constitution and prostitution,
Flowing in stale current
From England to New England.
Under brown fog of hurricane end,
Matrons on Beacon Hill
Send plumbers to kitchen doors
In a land begun by tradesmen.
Debauched?
Ready to crumble from within?
As England, so the USA?
Perhaps another New World
Another cradle
Not on this globe.
I care and fail to care,
No longer strive toward beginnings,
No longer strive to strive.
New world become old,
An inheritance,
A place to make do.
Back to poem details
|