By Glenn Cassidy

Image via Wikimedia Commons

Carnegie’s university rises in the east,

laboratories where engineers train,

etching paths to the future over silicon.


Carnegie’s museum sits above the west,

ruins of Greece and Rome,

dinosaur bones retracing paths to the past.


All day the bridge carries Pittsburgh

between past and future

while the hollow beneath collects


old houses and worn out factories

like a gap between sofa cushions

filling with crumbs and lost pennies.


The road through the hollow runs skew

to the bridge, neither parallel nor intersecting,

people above and below passing in separate dimensions.


The steel arch leaps the ravine graceful

as the bronze panthers guarding the bridge’s

entrance while the hollow spills on down


to the river and the empty rail yards

where the steelworks stood

when the bridge was built,


when steel built Carnegie’s fortune,

when slender metal trusses

erected gleaming paths to the future.

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