Poem about an Amusement Park that shuts down over the death of one of its young patrons. |
THE QUIET OF A CAROUSEL ** Images For Use By Upgraded+ Only ** Even the air spun wrong it felt the blow of leaves like circus bullets two things that should never happen a Fair should never run out of ice cream and a Theater should never close. Slice the breath with a kitchen knife space is out sick today having a hard time catching the sky the cement paths of the park emptier than the the silence of footfalls that only echo past loneliness. An assembly of shadows gather to mourn the loss of realism swirling and screaming around with spectral jealousy why is it we look at them as extensions of ourselves but shadows look at us as what they used to be not remembering how to call us back to them. This can't end good statues feel the severance of hands that molded them from vats of liquid bronze their likeness to austere form feels the tendency to melt beyond recognition of solid mass now apertures having lost the human-quality dream. The rifts and shrills of laughter weep in another dimension cascades of grief slide down walls of alien fortitude we hear it on Earth as the change in subtle wind knocking at our tears not reasoning why a sound we cannot hear, only feel it as the smile that will not come. "Something special will come of this," says the entrance Billboard with the face of a scary clown, lips moving in slow-motion, reinforcing the petrifying cracking lines of an exaggerated, painted face. Why is it somewhere in this nameless town a little boy dies and his memory shuts down the flow of life and whispers here he remembers the Cotton-Candy Man and wonders where he is today. . . And why for this little boy do suddenly those wooden horses on a quiet carousel come alive with welcoming whinny's that only HE can hear? |