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The city was laid like a wasteland Like a rusting, crumbling sore, Half of the houses were boarded up Along a neglected shore, The spirit had long gone out of it That had made the city great, Men fifty miles to the south of it Were determining its fate. Way up on the Presidential floor Was a group of greedy men, The czars of the old industrial core Who had bled the town back then, ‘The real estate’s a disaster,’ said A man who had been the Mayor, ‘The auto plants are a rusting heap,’ Said the man who held the Chair. ‘We’ve got more pensioners on the funds Than workers in the plants, There’s crime and violence in every street And the Unions make demands. So what’s the conclusion, gentlemen, Do we give this plan its head?’ ‘Whatever we do, it’s much too late, The city’s as good as dead!’ And that’s how they came to build ‘The Tower’ To illuminate the sky, ‘There’s plenty of work for everyone At a hundred storeys high!’ Nobody knew just what it did Or what they were building for, They only knew that they had a wage, Could hold up their heads once more. A central lift in The Tower went up And down ten times a day, Taking tools and materials To restrict the Tower’s sway, ‘They say we’re going to go High-Tech And they’re closing down the Plants, The days of auto’s have gone for good But they won’t tell us their plans.’ The Tower was built within the year With a gaping hole up top, A semi drove through the streets one day And by The Tower, it stopped. It carried a massive box-like thing With a mass of flashing lights, Was loaded into the lift, and sent Up on its maiden flight. They took it up and it crowned The Tower While the people watched in awe, There hadn’t been people in the streets Like this since the Second War. A massive counter was counting down As the people stood and cheered, ‘I hope it’s not what I think it is,’ Said a man with a long, white beard. While down in the Presidential Suite Just fifty miles away, A group of men put their sunnies on And stood by the window bay, ‘Well how do you clear a festering slum,’ Said one, as he watched the clock, While back at The Tower a sign lit up And the word was ‘Ragnarok!’ David Lewis Paget
0
Nov 17, 2013
Nov 17, 2013 at 9:08 PM UTC
The Tower
The city was laid like a wasteland Like a rusting, crumbling sore, Half of the houses were boarded up Along a neglected shore, The spirit had long gone out of it That had made the city great, Men fifty miles to the south of it Were determining its fate. Way up on the Presidential floor Was a group of greedy men, The czars of the old industrial core Who had bled the town back then, ‘The real estate’s a disaster,’ said A man who had been the Mayor, ‘The auto plants are a rusting heap,’ Said the man who held the Chair. ‘We’ve got more pensioners on the funds Than workers in the plants, There’s crime and violence in every street And the Unions make demands. So what’s the conclusion, gentlemen, Do we give this plan its head?’ ‘Whatever we do, it’s much too late, The city’s as good as dead!’ And that’s how they came to build ‘The Tower’ To illuminate the sky, ‘There’s plenty of work for everyone At a hundred storeys high!’ Nobody knew just what it did Or what they were building for, They only knew that they had a wage, Could hold up their heads once more. A central lift in The Tower went up And down ten times a day, Taking tools and materials To restrict the Tower’s sway, ‘They say we’re going to go High-Tech And they’re closing down the Plants, The days of auto’s have gone for good But they won’t tell us their plans.’ The Tower was built within the year With a gaping hole up top, A semi drove through the streets one day And by The Tower, it stopped. It carried a massive box-like thing With a mass of flashing lights, Was loaded into the lift, and sent Up on its maiden flight. They took it up and it crowned The Tower While the people watched in awe, There hadn’t been people in the streets Like this since the Second War. A massive counter was counting down As the people stood and cheered, ‘I hope it’s not what I think it is,’ Said a man with a long, white beard. While down in the Presidential Suite Just fifty miles away, A group of men put their sunnies on And stood by the window bay, ‘Well how do you clear a festering slum,’ Said one, as he watched the clock, While back at The Tower a sign lit up And the word was ‘Ragnarok!’ David Lewis Paget
david-lewis-paget
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Nov 17, 2013
Nov 17, 2013 at 9:08 PM UTC
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