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I heard a woman today Through her subtitles. She was on a documentary About the dangers of Holy conflict. She said to the world, Eyes storming with warning paleness, "If they" the selfish, unholy Palestines, "Had taken my son, I would have destroyed the world." She was as old as my (Frailer, softer) grandmother. (Who has never heard a gunshot Or seen a temple burning Or beheld a crushed glass message On a cold German night.) On an old porch she sat, Wrapped in moth-worn Fabric thinner than my shirt Without a shiver of fear Or doubt, And stated this cold fact. She would have destroyed the world. Later in the thinly white day Her son visits her, bringing cigarettes. "For later," he insists, but She makes use of one immediately, Gripping with the firmness of A woman who needs nothing more Than a son and a cigarette. His face and the tip light at the same time. The fire (in his eyes) burns discordantly. "You know I don't like the Smell of your cigarettes." He snatches it from her And sends it to a dusty grave with his heel. Ungrateful ******* I was standing now, Shouting him down through my Emotionless flat-screen television. A thousand miles away And every heartbeat breaking with That worn and aged face That betrayed nothing. What pain must contempt be From one who is in her eyes More precious than the world? The stupid, unthinking, unwitting Cruelty of it strangles me. But then she smiles with knowing eyes, And waits a few more heartbeats than I can bear, To say, "Just one more?" The worthless (world-worthy?) son, Prideful and ashamed, Scratches his temple and Shakes his head. "No," he says, And hands her another.
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Sep 5, 2010
Sep 5, 2010 at 3:29 PM UTC
A Thousand Miles Away
I heard a woman today Through her subtitles. She was on a documentary About the dangers of Holy conflict. She said to the world, Eyes storming with warning paleness, "If they" the selfish, unholy Palestines, "Had taken my son, I would have destroyed the world." She was as old as my (Frailer, softer) grandmother. (Who has never heard a gunshot Or seen a temple burning Or beheld a crushed glass message On a cold German night.) On an old porch she sat, Wrapped in moth-worn Fabric thinner than my shirt Without a shiver of fear Or doubt, And stated this cold fact. She would have destroyed the world. Later in the thinly white day Her son visits her, bringing cigarettes. "For later," he insists, but She makes use of one immediately, Gripping with the firmness of A woman who needs nothing more Than a son and a cigarette. His face and the tip light at the same time. The fire (in his eyes) burns discordantly. "You know I don't like the Smell of your cigarettes." He snatches it from her And sends it to a dusty grave with his heel. Ungrateful ******* I was standing now, Shouting him down through my Emotionless flat-screen television. A thousand miles away And every heartbeat breaking with That worn and aged face That betrayed nothing. What pain must contempt be From one who is in her eyes More precious than the world? The stupid, unthinking, unwitting Cruelty of it strangles me. But then she smiles with knowing eyes, And waits a few more heartbeats than I can bear, To say, "Just one more?" The worthless (world-worthy?) son, Prideful and ashamed, Scratches his temple and Shakes his head. "No," he says, And hands her another.
share, don't steal, etc. This was my first genuine poem. It's here not because I think it's good, but because I will lose it if I don't put it with the others.
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26/American
Sep 5, 2010
Sep 5, 2010 at 3:29 PM UTC
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