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Showing posts with label fairness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fairness. Show all posts

Sunday, September 18, 2022

QUEUED

by Annie Cowell


The queue for Queen Elizabeth II's lying-in-state is visible from space in this photo taken Sept. 16, 2022. (Image credit: Satellite image ©2022 Maxar Technologies @Maxar via Space.com.)


We feel
it is a very
British thing,
the queue.
That we 
invented it,
monopolise it,
transformed it
into art. 
We queue,
best foot
forward, wearing
stiff upper lips,
displaying 
plumes of
peacock pride.
For centuries 
we have practised; 
in war time 
ration lines, 
supermarkets, 
airports, 
Wimbledon. 
It agitates 
our sense
of fairness;
we are ready
to be tested, 
to fight 
for our 
rightful
place. 
Now, 
we have
the mother
of all 
queues.
A record 
breaker,
meandering
for miles,
flowing 
like the
Thames through 
the heart 
of London.
A pulsing
tail of 
humanity,
from Britain 
and abroad
eager to 
embrace
a marathon
of waiting
and be a part 
of history.
No agitation
here, instead
a camaraderie
of shared
experience,
of sorrow.
At last,
there is
the end.
A pause,
in which
to bow 
our heads.
Pay respects.
Duty
bound, 
it seems,
to say
farewell. 


Annie Cowell  grew up in Northern England. She is a former teacher who lives by the sea in Cyprus with her husband and rescue dogs. She is widely published in Popshot Quarterly, The Milk House, Paddler Press, and more. Her debut chapbook Birth Mote(s) is now available.

Saturday, July 04, 2015

MY FLAG

by Marilyn Peretti







At the mic on the sidewalk
some kids say justice
is the meaning of the Fourth,
some say fireworks, some
some say cookouts,
but some say justice.

Did they mean fairness,
decency, moral rightness,
equity, abiding by law?
Is this taught to children now?
Fourth of July means justice?

Maybe these wise children know
that the Fourth does not mean
burning churches of black folks,
battering a man in a police van,
giving up on finding prison escapees,
denying the poor health insurance,
or shooting pray-ers inside a church.

I wave my American flag
for what the children have learned.


Marilyn Peretti, Glen Ellyn, Illinois, is published by The New Verse News and by various journals; nominated for Pushcart Prize; and publishes poetry books on www.blurb.com/bookstore. She writes with fellow poets in Chicago's western suburbs.