by Dawn Sands
Explosions
for Palestine, 4th November 2023
You are buried, all four foot five of you interred
under a twenty foot pile of rubble, skin
caked in mud and blood and rib cage crushed
by the weight of your own home on top of you
and I am here writing poetry about it. If you had a pen to write with
and a sheet of paper that didn’t burn with you
what would you say? Would you dream of a before
or hope for the after or would you write about
the bombs as they fell, how they blinded you with light
but not in the way God does? Would you write
as we do about the problems you wish you had,
would you write about the beauty we reject, rain glimmering
on pavements in evening light as we hurry home longing
for a bath and a few hours’ peace to paint the walls?
Your walls are crumbling, they launch their real
bombs into the air and we look at our real
television screens and don’t scream. Maybe once this is over
they will write stories about hope but for now we light our candles
and try to believe that they will rival the explosions
that brought down your city. Tomorrow we will set off fireworks
and watch the coloured smoke dissipate into the dark,
and you’ll be somewhere in there but we can’t quite pinpoint
where so we’ll ignore it. Or maybe
you’ll be looking down too from your seat in the sky
and thinking this, this is what explosions are for,
writing your name in the air with a sparkler for eternity, name in lights, name in the night.
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