Monopoly by Connie Wanek

 
We used to play, long before we bought real houses
A roll of the dice could send a girl to jail.
The money was pink, blue, gold as well as green,
and we could own a whole railroad
or speculate in hotels where others dreaded staying:
the cost was extortionary.

At last one person would own everything,
every teaspoon in the dining car, every spike 
driven into the planks by immigrants, 
every crooked mayor.
But then, with only the clothes on our backs,
we ran outside, laughing.

~ from On Speaking Terms (Copper Canyon Press, 2010)
Previous
Previous

If I Gave Up by Kelly-Anne Riess

Next
Next

The Waking by Theodore Roethke