Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Why We Blight

Who's afraid of the

iron lung? ricketts? po-li-o?

spent maladies long



adapted to, outran,

then - mutation! - to bird flu

and masked persons



on city buses,

afraid to cough, forgetting

about polio,




knowing that what took

grandfather, felled dead in

the paddy for want



of medicine, could

only touch them viscerally

via cathode ray tube



yet panic passed

like a baton as people

sniffed the air for



fear that would release

the hollowness embodied

by ricketts, the sight



of people hooked

to breathing machines and, that

devil, polio.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

"Blight" is a terrific word. I'm keeping a list of your word pool to cull from.

I even sung the first stanza to the tune of " " to see if it fit rythmically. It did up until "fall away..."

Of course, I shiver to think the gravity of this subject matter. And would like to see "grandfather, felled dead in the paddy for want..." further developed.

It's neat to see stanzas, here. I'm on a stanza kick lately; your haiku form (pretty consistent) deserves a big hat's off.

Didn't bird flu come from civic cats?