Guns And Cell Phones Poem by Donal Mahoney

Guns And Cell Phones



In St. Louis young blacks
carry guns like cell phones
and use them often

to shoot each other,
as we read in the daily paper
and see on local television.

Black adults now put signs
in parks and yards in
neighborhoods around the city

with this message for their young:
“We must stop killing each other.”
They want to stop the suicide.

The poet Gwendolyn Brooks
once wrote that peace
won’t come to anyone until

everyone is “tea-colored.”
By 3015 the world may know
if Gwendolyn was right.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Pearl Walden 04 May 2015

Miscegenation was nearly my M poem today, for I was thinking along those same lines. It is the only solution to irrational dependence on visual cues. Then someone will invent colour-matching cards.

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