Göring in Captivity
Loudly sang the Reichsmarschall,
first to arrive in the makeshift chapel.
An incongruous sight in the first row
morphine-addict, in his mind reliving
dog-fights from long ago, recalling the
plundered works of art. Once the
second-in-command to pure evil,
now ingratiating himself with charm.
He saved the Jews who tended his
wounds after the Putsch., but ignored
the cries of those from ghetto and camp
facing underserved death. What were
the thoughts in his mind as he sang
the hymns he had scorned for so long?
All a façade- in the end he refused
the Host and swallowed hidden cyanide.
Before I Lived in Cities
Before I lived in cities
I remember the exhilaration
riding through the Liberty Tubes
in the backseat of a station wagon
and beholding the city wedged in
between the rivers resplendent in sunshine.
A few years later and for longer
commuter trains to another city;
the Reading Terminal awash in
sawdust and food of all kinds,
winos teetering on Market Street
vending soft pretzels three-for-a-
quarter as pedestrians and SEPTA
busses passed by.
At the discount eyeglass store
Dad summoned small-town ethnic
charm Eddie, this is my son! I
smiled as Eddie said Ah! Your son!
as it probably happened in
towns back in the Old Country.
In time scouring newsstands for copies
of Der Spiegel, head shops on Sansom
Street for Rolling Stone and things I
never would use, cheaper LPS than
they had in the mall.
Decades pass, I came and went, fascination
turned to frustration, then to flight. Then
unexpectedly occasional return, showing the
sights to our son, recapturing the wonder,
wounds healed from the time I lived in cities
The Second Hometown
Distances were so much closer between
the villages. Resemblance among the
houses (no basements- a shock) different
though in size and curbing, looping streets that
connected new-found friends to me as the
years passed and remain in memory though
others live in them now. Behind me stretched
the quarries, kilns, colonial relics,
perfect for hiking or contemplation
as I pondered options for the future,
vague ambitions slowly taking shape as
vagaries swirled within and around me.
Tesserae I gathered, some discarded,
finding others far away, later on
marveling as they fell into patterns
more resplendent as I imagined then.
Blessed was I to show their colors to some
from those village that became my home.
Winding River: The Susquehanna
The stream that falls towards the south, stretching
across three states in a zigzag pattern
is a fickle force. Wide and beautiful,
forests and towns dotting the riverbanks
with stunning views. Green in spring or summer
aflame in autumnal splendor, bare-branched
in cold winter’s grip, twice in my memory
creating chaos. Once overflowing
banks in Agnes’ June catastrophe
(I was 100 miles to the south then),
Two decades later almost within sight
as snowmelt reinforced the surging stream.
Guardsmen and civilians sandbagged near
the bridge, downriver some of us waited
news of disaster or deliverance.
The levees held, the waters surged to the
Chesapeake. Once again the river was



