Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
Even from behind the glass, you can smell the chemical that keeps the moths away. A vast mound of matted sheep’s wool you would say, except (they assure you) it is original, all two tons of it, the human hair that was left unused at the end. The rest went for socks to keep workers’ feet warm. All grey now, sixty years on, it has aged as those that owned it never did. They went naked to the shower room, clutching the soap they would never use, and then to the ovens. A lorry’s engine drowned the screams, and the Governor’s wife tended her flowers, making a garden “like paradise.”
0
Jan 28, 2018
Jan 28, 2018 at 11:22 AM UTC
Remnants - Auschwitz **
Even from behind the glass, you can smell the chemical that keeps the moths away. A vast mound of matted sheep’s wool you would say, except (they assure you) it is original, all two tons of it, the human hair that was left unused at the end. The rest went for socks to keep workers’ feet warm. All grey now, sixty years on, it has aged as those that owned it never did. They went naked to the shower room, clutching the soap they would never use, and then to the ovens. A lorry’s engine drowned the screams, and the Governor’s wife tended her flowers, making a garden “like paradise.”
This is at least the fourth major re-write of this poem . "A poem is never finished, only abandoned."
paul-hansford
Written by
Jan 28, 2018
Jan 28, 2018 at 11:22 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem