Poems
The Improved Binoculars, 1955
Below me the city was in flames: the firemen were the first to save themselves. I saw steeples fall on their knees. I saw an agent kick the charred bodies from an orphanage to one side, marking the site for a future speculation. Lovers stopped short of the final spasm and went off angrily in opposite directions, their elbows held by giant escorts of fire. Then the dignitaries rode across the bridges under an auricle of light which delighted them, nothing for later punishment those that went before. And the rest of the populace, their mouths distorted by an unusual gladness, bawled thanks to this comely and ravaging ally, asking Only for more light with which to see their neighbour's destruction. All this I saw through my improved binoculars.