[This
poem won The
Formalist's 1995 Howard
Nemerov
Award. It also
won the New England
Poetry
Club's 1996 Gretchen
Warren Award. – Ed.]
Moscow Zoo
We
saw the mass grave at the Moscow Zoo.
A
sullen man dug up a human skull
Then
held it high for journalists to view.
Forensic
specialists arrived to cull
Remains
and clues from this forgotten plot
On
which the zoo still plans to cage a bear.
The
experts guessed these prisoners were shot
For
special reasons; no one was aware
Of
comparable scenes at urban sites.
No
one knew if these bones belonged to spies,
Suspected
Jews or zealous Trotskyites,
So
none of us displayed the least surprise
When
bureaucrats emerged from quiet cars
To
hint this might have been the work of czars.
A.M.
Juster
©
A.M. Juster; originally printed in The Formalist;
used by permission of the author.
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