A dead floating muskrat:
what a metaphor for
the fifteen tortured miles
of that “channelized ditch”
we call Scajaquada Creek.
Since April 1990, we had
struggled to “clean up” the
last stretch of that stream
after it emerges from
three miles of under-
ground confinement – the
ultimate degradation for
free flowing waters.
What should have been
a source of pride and pleasure
has instead become the
cemetery for shopping carts,
capitalist debris,
urban travois for the home-
less and street people –
our wretched of the earth.
What should bring us together,
should be our center and focus
has been marginalized,
imprisoned and violated
so that only leeches
can live in its gleaming waters.
DAVID LAMPE, chair of the Burchfield Penney's Writers and Poets series, will join poet Karen Lee Lewis as the featured guests at this month’s Readings at the RIC Series event at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Room 101 of the Resource and Information Commons at Daemen College, 4380 Main St., Amherst. He is professor emeritus of English at SUNY Buffalo State, where he taught for 37 years, and author of the poetry collections “The Trees Walked” (2006) and “Quivers of Anonymous of Elmwood” (2009).
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