100
not as epic as 300, but this is my One Hundreth post. I feel so weird knowing that it is to complain about the weather.It has been snowing ALL day, when i woke up it was snowing, and it appears that when i go to bed it shall be snowing.
I just thought, as i was writing this, that because this is such an important post i should at least add something intellegent to it, so here is a nice poem:
Welcome to Hiroshima
is what you first see, stepping off the train:
a billboard brought to you in living English
by Toshiba Electric. While a channel
silent in the TV of the brain
projects those flickering re-runs of a cloud
that brims its risen columnful like beer
and, spilling over, hangs its foamy head,
you feel a thirst for history: what a year
it started to be safe to breathe the air,
and when to drink the blood and scum afloat
on the Ohta River. But no, the water's clear,
they pour it for your morning cup of tea
in one of the countless sunny coffee shops
whose plastic dioramas advertise
mutations of cuisine behind the glass:
a pancake sandwhich; a pizza someone tops
with a maraschino cherry. Passing by
the Peace Park's floral hypocenter (where
how bravely, or with mistaken cheer,
humanity erased its own erasure),
you enter the memorial museum
and through more glass are served, as on a dish
of blistered grass, three mannequins. Like gloves
a mother clips to coatsleeves, strings of flesh
hang from their fingertips; or as if tied
to recall a duty for us, Reverence
the dead whose mourners to shall soon be dead,
but all commemoration's swallowed up
in questions of bad taste, how re-created
horror mocks the grim original,
and thinking at last They should have left it all
you stop. This is the wristwatch of a child.
Jammed on the moment's impact, resolute
to communicate some message, although mute,
it gestures with its hands at eight-fifteen
and eight-fifteen and eight-fifteen again
while tables of statistics on the wall
update the news by calling on a roll
of tape, death gummed on death, and in the case
adjacent, and exhibit under glass
is blass itself: a shard the bomb slammed in
a woman's arm at eight-fifteen, but some
three decades on-as if to make it plain
hope's only as renewable as pain,
and as if all the unsung
debasements of the past may one day come
rising the to the surface one again-
worked its filthy way out like a tongue.
-Mary Joe Salter (1984)
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