Posts Tagged ‘Long island’

revolutionary-war-15839

It’s in My Blood
By David Allen

Some 240 years ago
Several Allens fought
For American independence
From the British Royal Crown.
While great x-times
Cousin Ethan Allen
Led his Green Mountain Boys
In a revolutionary rampage,
The Allen clan on Long Island’s
North Shore kept Great Neck
A rebel island amidst
Tory King’s County.
One young Allen lad
Even signed up to beat the drum
For General Washington’s troops.
And was wounded
During the Battle of New York.
So, how’s this history feel
After all these generations?
Not so free,
Not so independent.
The Democracy the
Founding fathers fostered
Has become an oligarchy.
We’re ruled by the corporate elite,
The new royalty.
Maybe it’s time for a new …

Um, maybe tomorrow,
Tonight we’re binge watching
Game of Thrones.

Waiting For A Train

                   IT’S TIME TO LEAVE
                        By David Allen

Hickory, dickory, dock
            the hands crawl ‘round the clock.
                        Time’s face is spaced,
                                    my mind’s erased,
                                                my plans suitcased
                                                                    and locked. 

I thought I heard you calling,
but I turned and was alone.
I began to feel a yearning
for some distant place called home.
But home is just an idea
that I made up in my head
and you are just the memory
of a path I used to tread.

 
            So, with the rising of the sun
            I’ll be going, I’ll be gone
            it’s off to new adventure’s I am bound.
            Off to see the sights,
            feel the depths, climb the heights,
            it’s time that I be moving
            got unbound.
 
I looked into a mirror
and a face asked, “Who are you?”
A strong hand held the scissors,
the haircut short and new.
The old me’s sleeping somewhere,
while the new one’s taking leave,
he’s turned his back on yesterday
with new tricks up his sleeve.
 
            To all my old friends,
            I bid fare you well,
            I can’t complain
            you did all right by me.
            To all my future friends
            I shout, “Here I come!”
            To get roaring drunk and stoned
            and just to be.

 
Tired thumb out to hitchhike,
            rides fly by it looks like
                        I’m being passed over again.
 
The sky is getting cloud dark,
            in the distance a dog’s bark,
                        my upturned collar can’t keep out the wind.

 
So, Goodbye to Long Island,
the Home of the Strange,
goodbye to the good times of the past.
Goodbye to the loves
that I once pursued.
It’s a shock to find
forever never lasts.
 
            I wished that there was something
            that you would say or do,
            but I guess the one for giving
            would be anyone but you.
            The reasons for my going
            still aren’t very clear to me,
            but with no excuse for staying
            I could do nothing but leave

 
NOTE: I wrote this poem in 1972, a 24-year old on my way to Washington, D.C to do some full-time anti-war work after graduating from college.  I still like it.

My second book of poetry, “(more)’ is now available on Amazon Kindle. The paperback edition is also available. If you want a signed copy, email me at david@davidallen.nu. Order your copy today! I am like most poets — poor.

http://www.amazon.com/more-David-Allen-ebook/dp/B00N6W3DP8/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=undefined&sr=1-2&keywords=%28more%29+by+David+Allen

Here’s a review:

5.0 out of 5 stars Wanting (more), September 2, 2014
By Jenny A. Kalahar “the_story_shop” (Elwood, IN USA)
Here are wonderful, literate poems of longing, wit, wisdom and resistance; justice, injustice, the absurdities of life and of growing older. There are lines full of sensuality at every stage of our existence, and of the waste and usefulness around us. Tinged with the atmosphere of the Orient, they are as luxurious as legs that go all the way up. Mr. Allen’s years as a newspaper man stain his poems with a rougher ink that sticks to your fingers long after you’ve turned his pages. There are losses – parents, loved ones, friends – but there are poems of finding and creating. Children, grandchildren, lovers, partners in crime and art all swirl throughout this collection, humming like a secret humming song. But unlike most hummed songs, these words do matter. They do. So read them now and sing along.