Melted Crown
There are some things
so unimportant that they could
become
the most meaningful things in the
world;
——a speck of dust
sitting
in some ramshackle apartment
could be the
meaning of life itself—
but the modern day daily grind
subjugates the thoughts and time of
the populace
with meaningless tasks and routine,
regular as newspaper,
day after day a long monotony
stretches wide through life
and the people don’t look for that
magical thing, the Intellect,
too busy and distracted, it passes
them by unnoticed;
the idea of its possible existence
rushes past them
without so much as a shed thought,
as if it were languishing in the
realm of nonexistence;
they live oblivious to it;
oblivious of it; oblivious within
it;
it seems the masses are so far from
realizing
that there is no man behind the
curtain pushing all the buttons.
Flowerwall
And nevermind the PG invective
sprayed off in the distance
past the window where
lies the snake—
the slithering snakiest of all—
the campus of the Suburban High School,
the land where yuppies are prepped
and bred
which I can see from my apartment
window
in the leafless wintertime;
bloom, yes, bloom-up
Spring flowers, faster than
fastest,
and cover this charade, this
blight,
this abhorrent eyesore sitting
motionless and mockingly in the distance
with your colorful perfumed persuasion,
your leaves and shade and
forgetfulness; fast,
faster, Spring
build that leafy Flowerwall
abuzz with insects much more
welcome
and healthy for my sight than these
insidious yuppies
aswim the guttery scumwater of that
yuppybowl on the hill.
Heath Brougher lives in York, PA and attended Temple University. He
recently finished his first chapbook, with two others on the way, as well
as a full-length book of poetry. His work has appeared or is
forthcoming in Diverse Voices Quarterly, Icebox Journal, Mobius, Main Street Rag, Yellow Chair Review, BlazeVOX,
Of/With, *Star 82 Review, MiPOesias, Eunoia Review, Van Gogh's Ear,
Stray Branch, Otoliths, Bird's Thumb, experiential-experimental- literature, Inscape Literary Journal, and elsewhere.
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