Blue buildings
A poem
When Lyonel Feininger, American, painted
Blue Skyscrapers, I was three years old
crawling swiftly to eighty-three. The country
was blue with longing for stability and peace
soon to be shattered by the Dies Committee’s
hunt for Reds and Japs. The world’s stage,
the yellow-tinted windows of the world,
steamed with black smoke. FDR limped
towards new deals, crusaded with Eleanor leading,
for neutrality. Yet it was blue, the sky,
the shade side of buildings, the mood only slightly
lifted on the teetering edge of the Empire State.
So it has happened before and will again
as we try to prance through modern times’
egregious use of irony in order to avoid
facing the truth. Oh, laugh, brother of blues.
Blow your horn in sweet notes of sorrow,
and sensate tones born to awaken even
the darkness at noon.