The past is a bucket of ashes.
1
THE WOMAN named To-morrow | |
| sits with a hairpin in her teeth | |
| and takes her time | |
| and does her hair the way she wants it | |
| and fastens at last the last braid and coil | 5 |
| and puts the hairpin where it belongs | |
| and turns and drawls: Well, what of it? | |
| My grandmother, Yesterday, is gone. | |
| What of it? Let the dead be dead. | |
| |
2
The doors were cedar | 10 |
| and the panels strips of gold | |
| and the girls were golden girls | |
| and the panels read and the girls chanted: | |
| We are the greatest city, | |
| the greatest nation: | 15 |
| nothing like us ever was. | |
| |
| The doors are twisted on broken hinges. | |
| Sheets of rain swish through on the wind | |
| where the golden girls ran and the panels read: | |
| We are the greatest city, | 20 |
| the greatest nation, | |
| nothing like us ever was. | |
| |
3
It has happened before. | |
| Strong men put up a city and got | |
| a nation together, | 25 |
| And paid singers to sing and women | |
| to warble: We are the greatest city, | |
| the greatest nation, | |
| nothing like us ever was. | |
| |
| And while the singers sang | 30 |
| and the strong men listened | |
| and paid the singers well | |
| and felt good about it all, | |
| there were rats and lizards who listened | |
|
and the only listeners left now | 35 |
|
are
the rats
and the lizards. | |
| |
| And there are black crows | |
| crying, Caw, caw, | |
| bringing mud and sticks | |
| building a nest | 40 |
| over the words carved | |
| on the doors where the panels were cedar | |
| and the strips on the panels were gold | |
| and the golden girls came singing: | |
| We are the greatest city, | 45 |
| the greatest nation: | |
| nothing like us ever was. | |
| |
| The only singers now are crows crying, Caw, caw, | |
| And the sheets of rain whine in the wind and doorways. | |
| And the only listeners now are
the rats
and the lizards. | 50 |
| |
4
The feet of the rats | |
| scribble on the door sills; | |
| the hieroglyphs of the rat footprints | |
| chatter the pedigrees of the rats | |
| and babble of the blood | 55 |
| and gabble of the breed | |
| of the grandfathers and the great-grandfathers | |
| of the rats. | |
| |
| And the wind shifts | |
| and the dust on a door sill shifts | 60 |
| and even the writing of the rat footprints | |
| tells us nothing, nothing at all | |
| about the greatest city, the greatest nation | |
| where the strong men listened | |
| and the women warbled: Nothing like us ever was. | 65 |