Sign up now for a
Free Email Account &
your own Online
Writing Portfolio!
Username:
Password:  
Sponsored Items

Click Here To Bid  

Read a Newbie
Badges
Testimonials
Tell a Friend
Know someone who'd
like this page?

Email Address:

Optional Comment:

Who's Online?
Members: 387    
Guests: 1995    

   
Total Online Now: 2382    
Writing.Com Time

Tuesday
May 29, 2012
9:41am EDT


  >> Static Item >> Poetry >> Writing >> ID #1584007  |   Show DetailsPrinter Friendly Page Tell A Friend
Managua
A poem inspired by Denis Johnson's novel: The Stars at Noon.
Rated:
13+
by
This item has no ratings.
"Viva Reagan-Muerto"
We have seen your kind,
crouching atop shadowy borders
where the strays bark, run wild.

Your sweat stings, acid venom.
The sun piercing vision blind.
We fatefully desire dimensions
when surreal clouds take all forms.

Managua,
applied culture ministry,
in a sedan riding the mountainside
highway, Contras exchange bullets.

Behind the barricados
Sandinistas plan a surprise,
a blood speckled windshield
beneath the sunrise.

The slightest move will be your
death. What black market Cordoba
can offer the faintest sanctuary.
In life, in trade, everyone pays.

We will never become clean with rain
from a dark cloud. Throngs of dispossessed,
bred by ravenous wolves, live
with silence, they are of the earth.

Graffiti truth burns psyche,
There are no borders or dimensions
to what awaits. No dirt paths will
lead you safely from the gate.





© Copyright 2009 David Hawk (UN: hawkmoth27 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
David Hawk has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.
Log In To Leave Feedback
Username:
Password:
Not a Member?
Signup right now, for free!

All accounts include:
*Bullet* FREE Email @Writing.Com!
*Bullet* FREE Portfolio Services!