Current Track: Blabb
KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS

If you tell stories long enough my friend,


I think, if you are honest, you must own


That stories told here, told about here, try


To turn into ghost stories. Only by


Supreme and rigid force of will can you


Tell any story in this land of ours


And not discover, if you let it last,


A ghost or two within it, before long.





I do not mean, of course, merely the most


And obvious ghost stories. For indeed,


America has more than its fair share


Of phantom hitchhikers, of wailing shades,


Of unglimpsed hands of children neath the bridge,


The hook left dangling from the hot rod door.


The raw head and bloody bones, that howl


Somewhere out in the forest wilderness.


The creature at the bottom of the bed


Accusing you about its missing tail.


The riders in the storm-torn desert sky.


The spectres at the crossroads. The lovelorn


And pining rapping at the chamber door


Which, opened flung, reveals nobody there:


Just wind among the trees, just blackbirds on


The lintel, just the anchors on our wrists.





But any honest soul must also ask:


How many bones is my houses builded on?


The huddled masses, yearning to breathe free.


Some dead of hunger, some of overwork


Wearied of life, and weary still in death.


The worker and the slave, the refugee,


Those turned away from begging at the door.


The soldiers killed in every useless war


And those they killed in uselessness as well.


Our safety laws are written in the blood


Of those they were not written yet to save.


My people, of the many colored flame,


Have all the liberties that we have found


(Which yet are not so many) at the end


Of death march down the long brick-quilted road.


And underneath, how many hundred years


Of peoples, of whom many have not heard


On stolen land. Which aye, is all of it.


You cannot live a day, nay not an hour,


On land they claim was made for you and me


With having to wade across a flood


Of business, all unfinished, left by some


Old, pale, rich, heedless heir who, if he lived,


Would never stoop to speak to one of us.


The consequences of their lives unkempt,


The fallout of their choices unresolved.


Each day, you lay your hand on something that


Is both the remnant of somebody's life,


And could not come to be without their death.


Look close, with honest eyes, and you will see


The ghosts in whatsoever story's told.


We all are living in a ghost story.


Your house is haunted, and has always been.





And even as the universe runs down,


The stars burn out, and heat and time themselves


Grind to a halt. With humankind long dead


So that concepts of 'Marriage,' 'September,'


and 'Five' mean nothing: no one, now, is there


To whom they could mean aught. Still nonetheless


It will forevermore remain the truth:


September fifth was once my wedding day,


Not time nor omnipotence can undo


In Saecula Saeculorum, Amen.





The universe is meaningless until


We break its silence. Whatever we shout,


The echoes of it spread forevermore


Our stories like the ripples in a pond.





...and what else is a soul, if tis not that?


And what else is a ghost? And aye what else


Is immortality? My story too


Will someday be a ghost story, and I


The ghost that tells it. You that read these lines


Know this: Et in Arcadia Eris.


You feel the chill, a-creeping down your spine?


This house is haunted, and the ghost is mine.