I wake up to
an explosion outside
thin walls rumbling and cracking
under pressure.
-
My tired body
falls out out of bed
with clothes already on
hurtling towards the darkness outside.
-
The great black
is interrupted
here and there
by glowering flames
-
which lick at the night
as though they have been starved,
which have licked at people’s faces
and has left their bodies devastated.
-
As buildings fall,
whistling occupies the sky
a deafening blood horn
calling for the end
-
the ash piling high,
the taste unforgettable.
-
In a broken mirror
which lies in the grey street
I see the fragments of my own body, too
and try to forget the visual,
-
try to deny the inevitable
though I feel death’s cold fingers
wrapping themselves around my neck.
-
It’s hard to sleep
when all that you’ve known is dead,
when your childhood home is still-warm rubble
housing a gentle flame you can’t quite extinguish.
-
It’s hard to sleep
when it should have been you
but instead, you must sit,
wide awake through late nights
-
surrounded by the ghosts of
your schoolmates
your family members
your loved ones
-
and still are helpless
and still are threatened
and still must live
when it seems there is nothing to live for
-
but Death,
-
delayed ever so slightly.
About the Creator
Reece Beckett
Poetry and cultural discussion (primarily regarding film!).
Author of Portrait of a City on Fire (2020, Impspired Press). Also on Medium and Substack, with writing featured… around…



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