Poem
Alan Jude Moore
Cities Rebuilt after the War
Cities Rebuilt after the War
Cities Rebuilt after the War
outside your house is a plaza nowa coffee shop
a glove boutique
and a second hand stall
selling slim volumes of poems
written for people who lived before
at the end of your street
where tanks rested
before they started into it again
there is a small plaque
to factory workers
who doused their machines in kerosene
and knowing it would end
one way or the other
refused to assemble
even one more bicycle
or whatever it was that people wanted
in industrious cities they lived in then
their children born
between rockets and death
know nothing again will be absolute
in cities where things continue on
as if they were not
cities renamed and redrawn
there are photographs of missing cats and dogs
pasted on the walls
hand-bills posted to telegraph poles
drama classes belly dancers
and television sets for sale
in cities uncovered beneath the floor
on the building sites old builders whistle
at women walking past
in high heels and low rise pants
pushing new salvaged prams
they despair the absence of men
in cities subsumed into something else
there are lighter shades on the door
where bloody handprints have faded
like the influence of magicians
carnivals and clerics
the reasons they believed disintegrated
in cities repainted up against the wall
and somewhere each day
a mother says
I will make for you a summer
her children know it’s for her not them
there is only so much she can spin from dust
in cities frozen stiff
and into all its empty spaces
who knows what lights will shine
and into the deft reconstructions
if anyone is coming back again
to trim the hedges or put up shelves
in cities dreamt of as they were back then
so we argue about our favourite songs
TV shows and cigarette brands
discuss several women
whose bodies we prefer
to see exposed on magazine covers
metaphorically fucking us
we touch on the question of our debt
to former colonial labour
having left their homes
for our nation state
they know how empty it is
in a ribcage of streets decades dead
on park benches old women weep
with the anonymous children
of headless men
the last Franciscan friar in town
walks a swan across the bridge
of a city that’s lost its image
in rooms blown out
and blackened with fire
in hallways without doors
we take on different names
grow new heads arms and legs
and raise ourselves from what went before
facing capture by new regimes
we search for flames
remaining between us
in the shallow foundations
and magnolia walls
of cities rebuilt after the war
© 2013, Alan Jude Moore
From: Zinger
Publisher: Salmon Poetry, Cliffs of Moher
From: Zinger
Publisher: Salmon Poetry, Cliffs of Moher
Poems
Poems of Alan Jude Moore
Close
Cities Rebuilt after the War
outside your house is a plaza nowa coffee shop
a glove boutique
and a second hand stall
selling slim volumes of poems
written for people who lived before
at the end of your street
where tanks rested
before they started into it again
there is a small plaque
to factory workers
who doused their machines in kerosene
and knowing it would end
one way or the other
refused to assemble
even one more bicycle
or whatever it was that people wanted
in industrious cities they lived in then
their children born
between rockets and death
know nothing again will be absolute
in cities where things continue on
as if they were not
cities renamed and redrawn
there are photographs of missing cats and dogs
pasted on the walls
hand-bills posted to telegraph poles
drama classes belly dancers
and television sets for sale
in cities uncovered beneath the floor
on the building sites old builders whistle
at women walking past
in high heels and low rise pants
pushing new salvaged prams
they despair the absence of men
in cities subsumed into something else
there are lighter shades on the door
where bloody handprints have faded
like the influence of magicians
carnivals and clerics
the reasons they believed disintegrated
in cities repainted up against the wall
and somewhere each day
a mother says
I will make for you a summer
her children know it’s for her not them
there is only so much she can spin from dust
in cities frozen stiff
and into all its empty spaces
who knows what lights will shine
and into the deft reconstructions
if anyone is coming back again
to trim the hedges or put up shelves
in cities dreamt of as they were back then
so we argue about our favourite songs
TV shows and cigarette brands
discuss several women
whose bodies we prefer
to see exposed on magazine covers
metaphorically fucking us
we touch on the question of our debt
to former colonial labour
having left their homes
for our nation state
they know how empty it is
in a ribcage of streets decades dead
on park benches old women weep
with the anonymous children
of headless men
the last Franciscan friar in town
walks a swan across the bridge
of a city that’s lost its image
in rooms blown out
and blackened with fire
in hallways without doors
we take on different names
grow new heads arms and legs
and raise ourselves from what went before
facing capture by new regimes
we search for flames
remaining between us
in the shallow foundations
and magnolia walls
of cities rebuilt after the war
From: Zinger
Cities Rebuilt after the War
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