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Hope Horner: Vacancy

Friday, July 26, 2013

Pigeon of Palisades












Hey Pigeon of Palisades!
You and I are partners.
When I toss trash over my shoulder in search of a meal
You clean up after me.
When the sun disappears,
You coo me to sleep from the top of the Calvin Klein billboard on Sunset.
We make a good team, you and me.
You are not quite a bird.
I am not quite a man.
At least in their eyes.
                                                                     
Hey Pigeon of Palisades!
You can fly, can’t you?
I mainly see you hopping and wobbling, but I bet you can.
Yeah, you can fly just as surely as I can speak.
And yet I am never heard 
and you never soar.
My voice is useless - except to beg for change from tourists
Who never look me in the eyes
or stop to watch you fly.

Hey Pigeon of Palisades!
Do you belong here?
Do you wish you were somewhere else?
I am not welcome here either.
But here we are!
“Shoo!” They say to you.
“Get outta here!” They say to me.
So we move, but not far.
After all, where are we to go?

Hey Pigeon of Palisades!
You know they call you “dirty bird" right?
They call me worse, my friend.
They call me nothing.
I have no name.
They prefer it that way.
Yeah, I guess you could call me "dirty nothing." 
We are dirty
you and me--
Forgotten,
Invisible,
Scavengers.
We are the
Pigeons of Palisades.


Copyright Hope A. Horner, 2013. Use with permission only.
Contact author on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/hopeh1122 or by email at hopeh1122 (gmail).
Follow on Twitter @HopeNote

Saturday, July 20, 2013

As I See It


Jewishpress.com - 2012 Photo of the Year
A photo hangs on a wall in a quiet a museum
showing
anguished father carrying 
his 
dead 
son 
wrapped in a white shroud down a narrow Gaza street 
full of long shrieking faces.
The brick walls appear to squeeze him closer to the others,
but it is despair 
that draws these tight quarters.
From the photo he screams: 
Help me!
The sky should not rain death!
Children should not die!
Not my son!

That's how I see it--
But where I see people,
you see only propaganda.

A newspaper sits on in a plush hotel lobby

showing 
brown girl riding
hot
government
bus. 
High school track star in relay of desperation to a strange land,
with head in hands and her dreams behind her.
It is fear
that keeps her in her seat.
From the photo she screams:
Help me!
I belong here!
I know no other country!

I pledge! I pray! I race!

That's how I see it--
But where I see people,
you see only propaganda.

A camera pans to a stark Aleppo hospital
showing
young man gasping
wrapped
in 
bandages.
His IV drips as talking heads chatter--
"Who burned his eyes? Who collapsed his lungs? Should we help?
Now on to the sports..."
It is --indifference
That helps them keep their distance.
From the photo he screams:
Help me! 
The breeze burns! 
I can trust no one--nothing!
Not sky! Not air! Nor heaven!

That's how I see it--
But where I see people,
You see only propaganda.



Copyright Hope A. Horner, 2013. Use with permission only. Contact author on gmail at hopeh1122. Follow on Twitter @HopeNote

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Wheelbarrow

A bit of introduction to place this poem in context....
Soren Kierkegaard describes a person without a centering point in their life (faith in God was his center point) as "a drunken peasant who lies in the back of a wagon and sleeps and lets the horses shift for themselves."

WHEELBARROW 

Push me!
Slosh me around, Oh Captain!
Take me where you will in your wheelbarrow.
I'm wild, wayward,
wasted.
I go where you go
like a drunk on a bus
in this unforgiving, red seat 
that barely holds me.
My legs splay.
My elbows clamp.
My head rolls.
Push me!
Don't spill me out.
Take me to the hill
to the top 
where I can see what Pious Piper calls you up,
what pulls you to the peak.
Then, 
there, 
Oh Captain,
when you stop at the edge,
I will teeter in drunken despair
alone
and plead
Push me!


Who the heck was Kierkegaard? Click here for Wiki link.
Copyright Hope A. Horner, 2013. Use with permission only. Contact author on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/hopeh1122 Follow on Twitter @HopeNote