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A serious, dark poem about the past |
| We ate our donuts and climbed into the van, And our case manager asked who wanted To take the back road home. We were amenable to the scenery we'd see, So most of us answered favorably. Our van left the town and entered the dirt road Leaving the businesses on Main Street behind. We drove next to a muddy river, A good habitat for water moccasins. Trees grasped the muddy river bed, bare In Winter, silent witnesses to the past. Four derelict grave stones struggled to Remain upright beside the dirt road, leaning, Mute witnesses to unholy deaths. How many people were buried with No commemoration in this plot of ground? The bare bones of empty houses, with Holes in their roofs and forgotten doors, Intermittently stood, with modern, desirable Houses in between. What stories could these old homes tell, Of master and slave, and laws forgotten In the name of "decency", leaving Innocent young men hanging from trees? |