Ariadne Posted May 12, 2003 I live a life of poverty On an under-developed Brooklyn street With somber looking houses That were lost in defeat Our house is something of a run down shack The roof is crumbeling in And the walls are over-ridden with cracks There is a small space outside They call it a yard No grass or flowers grows there Just cement with fragmented glass shards My brother and I melt down money for extra change I have no friends because To the other kids I seem peculiar or strange I go to a school that resembles a jail The little kids with dirty faces Out of fear and other emotions, bully's warths they dread and hail To my brother, myself and my mom My father is a good man Who often stumbles home drunk Trying not to trip over our trash can He gives us his wages and keeps his tips So he can stop by the neighborhood bar To wet his lips My mother works her finger to the bone So we don't starve Or get kicked out of our home She cleans all the floors from top to bottom of our sharing house Almost as if to apologize for her Most of the time half-drunken spouse The library is my sanctuary away from my home It's the only place I can sit and reflect alone My best firends are novels and meaty books Other children don't give me so much as a look There is a tree outside my house that grows It has sprouted from the ground and only grows stronger with time A very ugly tree, but yet beautiful in its tenacity Although I live this life I don't despair because I have my family And as a family we have each other And for the rest of the world we don't care Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites