Bus Stop: A Comment on The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis

by Lindsay Camarillo

One little town,

All dreary and grey

When neighbors argued

They just moved away.

Empty, Deserted

Impartial, Unkind

They don't care for those

They had left behind.

Dusk through the dawn

And dusk through the day

Dusk throughout nighttime

It all stayed that way.

Save for a bus stop

Hid way in the streets

To a place were people

Fight for their seats.

A place that sparkled

Simmered and shone

A place were your body

Was no longer your own.

A beautiful meadow

Or so it would seem

A place like something

You'd see in a dream.

"Ghosts!" was the cry

You took up once there

And could see through the passengers

As though they were air

Ghosts in life

In that grey little town

Ghosts they were waiting

To go Up or Down

Met by those

Who hurt them in life

Met by those

Unhampered by strife

Solid and happy

They sought you by hand

And wished to lead you

Up too their homeland

But most of the ghosts

Did not wish to stay

Nearly all left

To go back to grey

All but for one

Dear, brave little you

Now you shall see

Paradise too.