Saturday, September 11, 2010

Still Tender

In light of the ninth anniversary of the 9/11 Terrorist attacks, I was hoping to write something wistful and hopeful today.  But as I examined my own feelings--particularly in the context of the current events and news of the day--I realized that I am still sore about that day.  Not sore in an angry way, but sore, like a muscle overworked suddenly.

Then I found this poem.  It is was written by William J. Monahan, and I read it yesterday as his post for  Meridian Magazine online.  I'll leave it with you to ponder, while I go put the flag out.

A Tribute to 9/11


By Wm J. Monahan



From the ashen sky we feel the molten debris cauterize our wounds,

numbing us to the desperate leaps from windows of lava

melting high above the expedient pavement of New York.

Frenzy and chaos give way to anger and despair

as angels risk stairways of death,

the glass and steel bending its last breath to the will of Al-Qaeda thugs,

(as if America were only spires of concrete or the dollars striping Wall Street).



Liberty did not bend an inch today nor bow her proud head to terror.

Her flame was not extinguished by renegades

contorting her frame into a twisted version of Justice

(as if Liberty needed terror’s graffiti to enhance Her image,

or hand-slap Her graceful fingers).



In the skies over Pennsylvania,

America swings back at the sucker-punch of United Flight 93,

resolute in preserving the ideal,

reflected in faces like Tom Burnett’s and Todd Beamer’s,

openly;

not hiding darkly as in a glass,

or cowering in caves shrouded in the anemia of a sickly god.



As towers crumble,

as the tephra of metal and ash

plume like Vesuvius gone mad,

we revere a photo of a bleeding child

enfolded in a firefighter’s blackened arms,

and like America, both destined to live on–to remember,

and to light the way,

because the torch is not fastened to Lady Liberty,

but to us all.

1 comment:

Taffy said...

I found myself choking back tears several times today.