Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
We need more Martians , they nattered at me all the time, More monsters—people like to be scared, As if those callow youngsters, Growing up with two cars in the garage And three sets at the country club, Their fraternity mixers at Whittier or Occidental, Knew the first **** thing about terror. Still, they wanted me to grind out the harum-scarum hokum They enjoyed watching two-reelers on Saturday afternoons While men were doing hard work in Leyte and Manila, As if the transitory fear of some ghoulish bogeyman Would last through the thirty-second epics Featuring some cartoon bear shilling for beer Or bunnies extolling the virtues of toilet paper. Let me tell you what fear is, I would say time and again, *It’s a padlocked fence and a smokestack Which isn’t churning out a **** thing. It’s the jobs you can’t get because you said something (And more likely, you didn’t) twenty years ago. It’s one more envelope from the bank or the phone company With bold red lettering on the front That you don’t open because you know what it says And how it doesn’t matter one bit, Because you can’t do a ******* thing about it*, And these promising young men would just look at me Like I was some poorly made-up extraterrestrial From one of their Buck ******* Rogers potboilers. Several of my neighbors here were among the men, Mostly boys in truth, who marched with the 126th New York, Taking fire at Petersburg and The Wilderness, At Spotsylvania and Cold Harbor. We have spoken about the horrors of war, The kaleidoscope of confusion and dread, No direction leading to shelter, no road guiding the way to home. They have said that, as frightening as the sound of the minie ***** Zipping overhead like malevolent flies, And the cannon were, what they found truly awful Was the manner in which those fields, So like the ones where they had flushed out quail as children, Became foreboding nightmare landscapes, Containing a dark madness That they never dreamed could have existed.
0
Mar 6, 2017
Mar 6, 2017 at 10:28 AM UTC
Rod Serling Muses From His Plot, Lakeview Cemetery, Interlaken, New York
We need more Martians , they nattered at me all the time, More monsters—people like to be scared, As if those callow youngsters, Growing up with two cars in the garage And three sets at the country club, Their fraternity mixers at Whittier or Occidental, Knew the first **** thing about terror. Still, they wanted me to grind out the harum-scarum hokum They enjoyed watching two-reelers on Saturday afternoons While men were doing hard work in Leyte and Manila, As if the transitory fear of some ghoulish bogeyman Would last through the thirty-second epics Featuring some cartoon bear shilling for beer Or bunnies extolling the virtues of toilet paper. Let me tell you what fear is, I would say time and again, *It’s a padlocked fence and a smokestack Which isn’t churning out a **** thing. It’s the jobs you can’t get because you said something (And more likely, you didn’t) twenty years ago. It’s one more envelope from the bank or the phone company With bold red lettering on the front That you don’t open because you know what it says And how it doesn’t matter one bit, Because you can’t do a ******* thing about it*, And these promising young men would just look at me Like I was some poorly made-up extraterrestrial From one of their Buck ******* Rogers potboilers. Several of my neighbors here were among the men, Mostly boys in truth, who marched with the 126th New York, Taking fire at Petersburg and The Wilderness, At Spotsylvania and Cold Harbor. We have spoken about the horrors of war, The kaleidoscope of confusion and dread, No direction leading to shelter, no road guiding the way to home. They have said that, as frightening as the sound of the minie ***** Zipping overhead like malevolent flies, And the cannon were, what they found truly awful Was the manner in which those fields, So like the ones where they had flushed out quail as children, Became foreboding nightmare landscapes, Containing a dark madness That they never dreamed could have existed.
Written by
Mar 6, 2017
Mar 6, 2017 at 10:28 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem