Thursday, August 06, 2015


LIGHT AND DARK AND LIGHT

Here and there in the grains of photos remaining from that time you can see the blurred outline of a person, sometimes with a child or even two, walking where the way was once familiar, but now was the bottom of an incinerator the size of their city, still burning through them even as they walked, perhaps to escape the heat of all the nothing that remained...

At other places in the mass of the ashes of a hundred thousand lives turned into wind and rain you can make out the speck of another one still living, bent over searching, sifting in vain through blackened flakes of what once was life, once a place of daily living, where now nothing stood, where all was flat and dark, dust and fragments of death...

After the fires died, first the relatives came seeking their loved ones, one mother searching for her daughter who that morning had gone into town early so she could pay the rent on her way to work, but the mother never found her daughter...

That mother and all the others - fathers, sisters, sons, daughters, brothers - wandered for days, weeks, the rest of their lives in their hearts in those ashes of a city of families, passing by in their dreams those passengers on the train who were charcoal statues in their seats, or those still just alive who wandered also, in search of death that waited only days away, or those who had left their instant white shadows on the flash-darkened stone of the bridge or the building when they'd joined the unseeable light...

All of it on that August morning-- every ash of bone, every unheard scream, every sear of pain or cry for love, every tear of life, every atom of vapor that had been a person-- all of it, is in our voices now...

4 comments:

Kalei's Best Friend said...

Your words definitely fit the description of that infamous b&w photo...

Kalei's Best Friend said...

btw the oldest shares that date... ironically she was suppose be born on Princess Di's wedding day...her Dad would tell her the significance of the date every birthdate...

Deb said...

You'd think the horror of that day would have been enough hell so we'd sit down together and agree to war no more, but apparently the lust for blood and conquest can never be quenched.

May there be peace on earth, and in our hearts.

Tabor said...

And they/we never decided to send a warning bomb out in the countryside...our country wanted to see what the effects would be in a populated area!