In 1919, a wave of molasses released from an exploding storage tank sweeps through Boston. |
Now I see the molasses, it’s all over town; all the streets and the sidewalks are sienna brown. It’s a sad situation of terrible fate; all of Boston now suffers in one sticky state. It is mid January in nineteen nineteen, and I work for the Globe as reporter McQueen. An explosion sent shock waves exceedingly high; wounds were many, and twenty one people did die. There was no rapid flow for molasses takes time; oozing goo scenic blight panorama in grime. It pains me that I have to report I confess; a molasses defeat, one inglorious mess. So I’m down on the walk—the scene devastates me; if I take any steps I am no longer free for molasses grabs hold with unbreakable will… and today Boston cries from a molasses spill. The molasses keeps coming albeit real slow; there’s an eerie sweet feeling yet no status quo. All the splatter on window panes, lamps and facade paints an alien messiness transcending odd. City leaders in government picked up the pace; monumental the cleaning that they had to face. But the cleanup demanded that time tick away; it was slow as molasses on that winter day. 24 Lines Writer’s Cramp 9-5-19 |