CHRIS BANKS
I Do Not Love The Twenty-First Century
But I try. So much is now happening. A vaccine for HIV.
Artificial intelligence. Reusable rockets. A new dwarf planet.
Gone is the old century, a time when I could have been
a polar explorer. A child detective wandering the fading streets
of another age, another life. Gone are the times when I felt
rooted to old places, names buried six feet under in memory.
Now I am a visitor in my adopted skin, in an adopted city,
my vision carrying the unbearable weight of melancholy.
The sound of a distant train pulls me away from the Here
and Now. The flowerbeds. The bees. Longing a slight breeze,
a destination calling out to me, but the ticket office is closed.
The train’s tracks pulled up decades ago. Still, I follow the sound
of the train to where the old rail lines once lead—out of town.
To an abandoned highway overgrown with yellow straw, and
tumbleweeds. The Motel Elsewhere sitting on the edge of
a parking lot full of abandoned cars. Its neon sign blinking
No Vacancy. The Tasty Freeze across the street foreclosed,
its windows boarded up. The café next door full of wraiths,
ghosts drinking steaming cups of departure. I know what
you are thinking. This is not a real place. That this is a mere
feeling, a mood without the substance of the real, the true,
but the architecture of the old century is there to be found,
in ruins, yes, but there, even if the journey is made alone.
