ghosts of water street: epilogue
I
i look down
upon the present nakedness of
water street
suited, tied, briefcase in hand
in air conditioned comfort
ashamed, i turn away
only to be drawn back
a voyeur, season after season
the changing light and shade,
upon the few remaining homes
archipelago like in their
loneliness,
their only constant.
II
no one sits on front porches
no one tends side-yard gardens
rich with goldenrod and too much
rhubarb
old garages stand slanted, doors
locked
hoarding fragments of old dreams
in rotting cardboard boxes -
abandoned -
they remain the last testament of
a dying street
III
the land where Holmes Foundry
stood
waits for a resurrection -
torn down- environmentally
cleansed
only weeds, rubble and controversy flourish
while its pensioned workers, all
dead
and dying by cancer’s severance
kiss
bless its memory of employment
curse its negligence in court
winning judgments, measuring
their life and worth
in currency they can never use
and like their future
leave behind.
IV
our lady of mercy has closed it’s
doors
directed by the diocese
no longer needed, superfluous
it’s calling bell silenced
sold , cleared of home rooms
renovated for commerce
it’s cross and name, carved deep
in stone
covered with aluminium- muffling
the call to morning prayers and
the angelus at noon
to spreadsheets and business plans
our play yards: parking lots.
V
the living ghosts give testament and tribute
to life before to-day
face to face we share our past -
of water street’s dark secrets,
try as we did to forget
beginnings,
we are forever it’s rust stained
children
branded by our address
marked by who we were
our eyes still reflecting the
hollowness
and the promises we made
to leave this street to others.
we did
we left
but can we ever get away?
Joseph A Farina - is a retired lawyer in Sarnia, Ontario, Canada. He is an award winning poet, internationally published in Europe and Middle East. Published in Quills Canadian Poetry Magazine, Ascent, Subterranean Blue and in The Tower Poetry Magazine, Inscribed, The Windsor Review, Boxcar Poetry Revue, his work also appears in the anthologies Sweet Lemons: Writings with a Sicilian Accent, canadian Italians at Table, Witness and Tamaracks: Canadian Poetry for the 21st Century. Published in U.S. magazines Mobius, Pyramid Arts, Arabesques, Fiele-Festa, Philedelphia Poets and Memoir and in Silver Birch Press Series. He has had two books of poetry published— The Cancer Chronicles and The Ghosts of Water Street and an E-book Sunsets in Black and White and his latest book, The beach, the street and everything in between.
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