I Hear America Sighing

After ‘I Hear America Singing’ by Walt Whitman

I hear America sighing, the varied complaints I hear.
Those of mechanics, each one bemoaning his as he walks away
from the shut-down factory. The carpenter bewailing his
as he boards up another broken shop window. The matron
in the hospital barking hers, harking back to the days of Obama.
The boatmen lamenting theirs, nets full of plastic bags and bottles.
The celebrity tweeting hers about the intrusion of privacy.
The banker howling his like the ghost of a wolf on Wall Street.
The shoemaker grumbling his as his son buys another pair
of Adidas trainers. The bellyaching of the blame-throwers.
The keening chorus of mothers grieving for murdered sons.
Each crying what belongs to him or her and to no one else.
America, I grew up with you, you my brash elder brother,
Superhero, singing in the rain from the Halls of Montezuma
to the shores of Tripoli, from the sands of Iwo Jima to
a Coney Island of the mind. Star-spangled romantic,
laconic wisecracker, go-getter, no sooner said than done.
Now the wisdom, has it cracked? The getting, has it gone?
The stars have dimmed, no moon ahead. Oh, say!
Can you dance by the light of the rocket’s red glare?
Flags furled, insults hurled, banners waved in anger.
In Times Square the wind moans, and all around the sound
of groaning, the earth trembling as the screen fades to black.
Stop sighing, America, start singing. Time to come back.