Из альбома: Blind Man’s Zoo
Detroit to D.C. night train, Capitol, parts East. Lone young man takes 
a 
seat. And by the rhythm of the rails, reading all his mother's mail 
from a 
city boy in a jungle town postmarked Saigon. He'll go live his 
mother's 
dream, join the slowest parade he'll ever see. Her weight of sorrows 
carried long and carried far. "Take these, Tommy, to The Wall." 
Metro line to the Mall site with a tour of Japanese. He's wandering 
and 
lost until a vet in worn fatigues takes him down to where they belong. 
Near 
a soldier, an ex-Marine with a tattooed dagger and eagle trembling, he 
bites 
his lip beside a widow breaking down. She takes her Purple Heart, 
makes a 
fist, strikes The Wall. All come to live a dream, to join the slowest 
parade 
they'll ever see. Their weight of sorrows carried long and carried 
far, 
taken to The Wall. 
It's 40 paces to the year that he was slain. His hand's slipping down 
The 
Wall for it's slick with rain. How would life have ever been the same 
if this 
wall had carved in it one less name? But for Christ's sake, he's been 
dead 
over 20 years. He leaves the letters asking, "Who caused my mother's 
tears, 
was it Washington or the Viet Cong?" Slow deliberate steps are 
involved. 
He takes them away from the black Granite Wall toward the other 
monuments 
so white and clean. 
O, Potomac, what you've seen. Abraham had his war too, but an honest 
war. 
Or so it's taught in school.