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FURTHER READING
Poems by Joan Murray
Chrysalis
Poems about Heroes and Bravery
Alexander's Feast; or, the Power of Music
by John Dryden
Dead Brother Super Hero
by Michael Dickman
Heroisms, 4, 5
by Dan Beachy-Quick
My hero bares his nerves
by Dylan Thomas
On Seeing Larry Rivers' Washington Crossing the Delaware at the Museum of Modern Art
by Frank O'Hara
Washington's Monument, February, 1885
by Walt Whitman
Poems about Tragedy
#4
by Jane Miller
A Wedding at Cana, Lebanon, 2007
by Tom Sleigh
Blood
by Naomi Shihab Nye
Falling
by James Dickey
Oklahoma City: The Aftermath
by Ira Sadoff
Poem for Japan
by Matthew Zapruder
Shirt
by Robert Pinsky
Song ["When I am dead, my dearest"]
by Christina Rossetti
What God Knew
by Marianne Boruch
You Can't Survive on Salt Water
by Kalamu ya Salaam
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Survivors--Found

 
by Joan Murray

We thought that they were gone--
we rarely saw them on our screens--
those everyday Americans
with workaday routines,

and the heroes standing ready--
not glamorous enough--
on days without a tragedy,
we clicked--and turned them off.

We only saw the cynics--
the dropouts, show-offs, snobs--
the right- and left- wing critics:
we saw that they were us. 

But with the wounds of Tuesday
when the smoke began to clear,
we rubbed away our stony gaze--
and watched them reappear:

the waitress in the tower,
the broker reading mail,
a pair of window washers,
filling up a final pail,

the husband's last "I love you"
from the last seat of a plane,
the tourist taking in a view 
no one would see again,

the fireman, his eyes ablaze
as he climbed the swaying stairs--
he knew someone might still be saved.
We wondered who it was. 

We glimpsed them through the rubble:
the ones who lost their lives,
the heroes' double  burials,
the ones now "left behind," 

the ones who rolled a sleeve up,
the ones in scrubs and masks,
the ones who lifted buckets
filled with stone and grief and ash:

some spoke a  different language--
still no one missed a phrase;
the soot had softened every face
of every shade and age--

"the greatest generation" ?--
we wondered where they'd gone--
they hadn't left directions
how to find our nation-home:

for thirty years we saw few signs,
but now in swirls of dust,
they were alive--they had survived--
we saw that they were us. 






From Poems to Live By by Joan Murray. Copyright © 2001 by Joan Murray. Reprinted by permission of Beacon Press, Boston. All rights reserved.
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