here the sunshine patriot, bright and bleached – they plucked the stars to hang them from your chest. the rest are gone, hidden by light pollution and concrete skies. your eyes reflect the blank face of stopped clocks; steps from the car, summer soldier.
but winter hides in the cold metal of the trigger
a bang – it echoes in fireworks, spatters the street with blue white red red red.
the stutter of a gun, or just a backfiring car? sunshine man melts in a puddle of gaudy red, the colour of sticky ice lollies and patriotism.
here the newscaster, weeping tirelessly for the camera. “he was our country,” he says, and wasn’t he just? back alleys and sunshine and wanting to go back, wanting to hide in the past.
and here the politicians, mourning loudly into crisp white handkerchiefs. oh, how i wish we could freeze time, draw grimaces in markers on their painted faces and watch them point fingers. they use pretty words heroic, or tragic and pat their sweaty backs.
meanwhile, sunshine man bleeds into the gutter red white blue the colour of freedom.
Yup, a poem about Marvel's (wonderful) "The Death of Captain America". Apologies both to Cap and the Winter Soldier, who, it seems, I've made into his murderer. Kudos if you caught the Thomas Paine reference(s)!