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Canary: “Imperiled”

Updated: Jun 22

Canaary published in Canary


Not far from where Paula currently lives in the Lake Worth Inlet watershed, blue herons forage when waters are calm. Some days, at high tide, ocean meets seawall and the intercoastal splashes on sidewalks and submerges small docks.



Missiles plunge into dead water,

practicing. Children taunt children.

Students hunted in school corridors


cloak themselves in silence.

Over and over again—black

skin pressed to pavement.


People flee from cars driven

into crowds. Blood letting out

onto asphalt mirrors ancestral


suffering—generations shackled,

native land usurped, naked masses

showered with gas. A prisoner


is beaten behind doors. Gradually

we die by our own hand. Witness

the eyes of the malnourished—


the same eyes staring from photographs

taken decades ago. Today’s starving

line sidewalks, fill classrooms,


live in cars. Water rises

into cities. Less than a century

before we drown, arms pinned


at our sides, the only music,

a tympani of loss.

Earth, our old love, watches.


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© Paula Colangelo.

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