Thru a puddle, I go Past the shuttered laundromat The charcoal stump colonials Carnivorous ivy Strangling the Rustbolt cars lining the Pothole roads that I never noticed Until now, Detroit is a real town
At the corner of Rosa Parks Dr., A rotting moonlight and gasoline aroma A damp liquor store and a bus-stop sign, 6 ghosts linger around the metal post Like silvery mothra , Clinging at night to an outdoor light The saviour stop. For tiffany spirits With expressionless faces.
Two phantom headlights manifest Out of the indescribable looming night And park at the sign
The ghosts faint Thru the double doors Of one rickety, dutiful citybus The tailpipes dripping wil-o'-the-wisp As it proceeds out of my view Into dark night shade.
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I wish I could say this was a dramatization. The area surrounding UofDM (the small, private, Catholic sancturary of a college I used attend) gives me the chills at night. And I swear, every person I would see at the bus stops (there really is a street called Rosa Parks Dr. with a corner bus stop) looked like a ghost.