RANDOM JACK POETRY HOUR: CLIMATE CHANGE
Ida
Memories
of Katrina haunt me
As
if it happened yesterday
I
want to scream at the TV screen:
Get
out! You’re in the way!
Ida
is category two and churning
From
Havana to New Orleans
The
roads are all jammed
The
people are under warning
The
fires of Hades burning
Will
Ida hit like Katrina did?
Will
the authorities be unprepared?
Will
the lower ninth be flooded?
Will
our sense of outrage be shared?
We
have entered an age of tragedy
It
often feels like the end of days
The
chain of horrors relentless
Seems
our legs are made of clay
New
Orleans Survives
Ida
hit the Gulf Coast hard
Like
a bombardment of missiles
Like
at twenty-foot wave
Like
the breath of an angry god
Full
of wrath wind and rain
The
power died before nightfall
Leaving
those who stayed behind
Hiding
seeking shelter inside
They
would baton down the hatches
They
would fight back the storm
They
would protect their belongings
They
would protect their homes
They
would do what they could
But
the storm kept rolling
Churning
like a beast
Spreading
mass destruction
Like
the Saint’s final feast
The
people of New Orleans
Know
they’re lucky to be alive
They
have fought through the years
Self-assured
they would survive
It’s
not a war zone like Kabul
It’s
not the end of a long drive
It’s
a place where a culture
And
its music still thrives
So
help them through this crisis
As
they suffer and we cry
We
will do what it takes
To
help New Orleans survive