Blood smells like copper
Death smells like wine
But there’s no smell like sorrow
Growing on vines.
It pierces my heart
Squeezes my breath
Stifles my cry
And shrouds me in death.
Gone are the children
That played on this street
Gone are the families
Gone, head, heart and feet.
Swept are their hopes
Banished their dreams
Cast off all the plans
Ripped bolts, nails and seams.
The homes are all gone
Churches gone too.
The wounded stumble about
Not knowing what to do.
Tuscaloosa and Joplin
They’re so far away.
What does it mean
At the end of the day?
The death of anyone
Diminishes me.
Our poor, ruined cities
Become a mortuary.
* This poem was originally published in May, 2011, as
Tuscaloosa and Joplin. I now update that work under this title,
following the horror that occurred in and around Moore, OK.
Having survived two relatively minor tornadoes, I cannot imagine
the fright and loss after an EF 4, or 5 tornado. My heart and
prayers go out to the people in our heartland. May a merciful,
loving God wrap them in His compassionate arms. This fallen
world subjects us all to such disasters.
Monday, May 23, 2011
Sky Terrors*
Posted by The Dashboard Poet at Monday, May 23, 2011
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