I
can always hear a freight train
from
beyond the cemetery
the
rumble of wheels on steel
tracks
carrying across the tomb-
stones,
crosses and graves
I
can always hear a freight train
from
the east end of the street
traveling
through live oaks
magnolias
and crepe myrtles
over
the traffic islands
I
can always hear a freight train
under
the gap beneath the window-
pane between
the door and the frame
horn
blowing before level crossings
blasting
warnings through darkness
I
can always hear a freight train
crossing
the continent
negotiating
the great divide
traversing
the great plains
from Omaha
to Cheyenne
I
can always hear a freight train
reminding
me of lost homes
absent
loves, missed opportunities
boxcars
not taken, doors never
forced
open, wagons left empty
I
can always hear a freight train
when I
lie awake before dawn
remembering
distant homelands
yearning
to go back in time
act,
move, love, risk, jump, fly, fall
I
can always hear a freight train
moving
oil, coal, steel and grain
echoing
through the night
never
letting me forget
there
is always another journey
Note: The line I can always hear a freight train is from the Counting Crows song “Raining in Baltimore.”
Nathanael O’Reilly is an Irish-Australian poet; he teaches creative writing at the University of Texas at Arlington. His books include (Un)belonging (Recent Work Press, 2020); BLUE (above/ground press, 2020); Preparations for Departure (UWAP, 2017); Cult (Ginninderra Press, 2016); Distance (Ginninderra Press, 2015); Suburban Exile (Picaro Press, 2011); and Symptoms of Homesickness (Picaro Press, 2010). His poems have appeared in journals & anthologies published in fourteen countries, including Antipodes, Anthropocene, Cordite, The Elevation Review, Mascara, Skylight 47, Strukturriss and Westerly.
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
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