![]() |
Poem about Harlem |
| Harlem under a full moon Pill-heads and drunks firing guns at the full moon Injured orphan children howling at the night sky Surly vagrant trains of shopping-carts and trash-bagged hands trouncing over a fallen eagle in the street, A snake slithering from its grasp A strange Italian closing a deli door to the tune of a loading gun Shady stoop slummers firing Molotov cocktail showers on tricycling-toddlers Buggled street-merchants wrapping themselves in Eastern rugs filled with Lady Liberty statues and dashboard St. Christophers. An old bebop-beatnik playing "Bye Bye Blackbird" through a backwards trumpet and warming himself with a trashcan burning with the American Constitution A blood-soiled American flag flannel waving goodbye on a cluttered and tearing clothesline of tourist t-shirts over 125th Street In a dark corner I can see Langston Hughes, In full battle-dress of royal blue and hazel cordoroys, scribbling his face with pearl sidewalk-chalk. His soul has grown deep like the rivers. Ragged and haggard junkies fingering the open wound that is the American Dream. |