drop some amens

The Holy Barons rumble through

the untended slum-gardens against the highway

and drop payloads.

If the halo-copters hear you scream from downstairs,


you get one from on high, and it makes

a whistle on the way down and


falls against your prayers—

it goes through one girl’s bedroom ceiling


and suddenly her college first-pick

knows how to spell her name,


writes it on a very eager letter to her mother;

it falls over the edge of the general hospital


and my neighbor can breathe without burning

through the bullet wound;


bam over the house on the hill

and she can afford to fix her eye


in Iceland without having to beg;

and bam in the river on the other side


and no more coughs or cholera

in the news the next morning;


and bam wins a granny the lottery one week

so she can keep her lonely son clean;


and bam loses an uncle the lottery the next

so he can keep his lonely heart clean;


and against the stained glass

for more baptisms than burials;

and against the muzzles

of things lost in the street


for less bad news than

boys made new.


I don’t know who calls in the coordinates,

where the map’s pushpin pricks turn into precipitation


but god, look at the damage littering this place.

It’s spare, and rare, but cratering,


changing people’s whole lives

with one whisper of gravity.


I just wish one day one of those

prayer-bombs could fall on me.