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Pyramid Scheme |
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Crone, old meat, once, this town was your home; now you're living on the street. The bottom line has put you there to rot. You can't pay the rent. Every seven years it doubles. Now shelter is too dear for you, since who you are is what you've got. It takes six weeks to build a cabin, six months to make a house, but thirty years won't pay for either, the banker and the landlord say, so nightly in TV dreams the pyramid of paper mounts in piles, it gets a purchase on your back and towers and sprawls and sags till what you've got is what you are - your family 's gone, the neighbors all rank strangers: a shopping-cart of newspapers and rags. Crone, caryatid broken under your stone, the full weight of the pyramid crushes down on your shoulders anonymous as brick. Jim Powell Jim Powell is the author of It Was Fever That Made the World and the translator of both Sappho: A Garland and Catullan Revenants. |
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