From far above
the whirring disturbs another night of restlessness.
-
Red eyes beaming straight through the rotten windowpane,
the aging double glazing too weak to hide me.
-
Outside, a drunken man rages and screams the name of a loved one,
presumably lost, presumably buried.
-
His pain practically palpable, I notice my hand trembling
and so I pull the window, with effort and a light grunt, closed to block out his haunting moans.
-
Diggers tore apart the park
and now the ambience is gone.
-
No children by day, nor smokers by night,
no place to hide from the prying eyes of skyscrapers.
-
Instead, now, a grey concrete mess
a mass of expanding ballast
the bodies of the past in the air vents and walls,
another piece of the abstracted cement puzzle.
-
I sit at the desk, the darkness shooed away
by a dim, dirty lamp,
mourning all that I’ve buried
until the morning comes.
-
The next day, my quiet walk
is filled with the echoes of creaking metal
as a thousand cranes prepare a new hellscape
which the next generation will
soon come to hate.
-
Their concrete prison.
-
I try to wipe the rust off of my shoulder
but it’s back a moment later.
This city’s wicked wishes
weighing heavy on my shoulders,
-
its metal still expanding,
still swallowing the land.
About the Creator
Reece Beckett
Poetry and cultural discussion (primarily regarding film!).
Author of Portrait of a City on Fire (2020, Impspired Press). Also on Medium and Substack, with writing featured… around…

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