Thursday, June 7, 2012

Grenades

The smoke of fireworks
held still in the 
street lamp halo,
the orange illumination
making a London fog
from hooligans' shenanigans. 


It was a freeze frame
of some other cosmic time
and place, the stiff
fog hanging as though glued
there in sky. No breeze
to stir it and carry it 
away. 


The firecrackers crackled 
in the background, lit and 
exploded- jumping beans
on the asphalt. I watched 
these small boys cackle and
duck as though they had thrown
grenades into enemy bunkers.
It was cruel trick they 
played in their heads and
in the blaze of light 
from the explosives
I saw their souls
were laughing too.


The crick-crackling 
on the side street 
echoed breaking
hearts in the summer night's
weir chill. The sound was 
the only one, 
the sparks hopping in
a tribal dance,
so foreign to me.


I drove on, letting the
smoke hang by its wires,
letting the soldier children
laugh at their black-hearted
intents. 

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