I found an injured memory in the park,
from the past. Lying in the overlooked dark,
staring up with eyes that sang. History
has been neglected so long it’s grown
rundown; nothing lives there anymore.
How does a body heal before it’s born?
Why is the sewing needle always burying
the bones of its thread? The wounded
past still hurts then and now.
Injured memory, you haunt
us all. Remember what happened,
and how. We’ll try to find a way home
together. It’s late and our loved ones
are wondering where we are.
About this Poem
For each year of their appointment the Poet Laureate for the City of Kingston writes at least one new original poem that addresses or reflects one or more aspects of life in the City, then reads it in public for the first time at the Mayor's Levee on New Year's Day. Jason Heroux would have read his new poem "The Future of Yesterday" at the 2022 Mayor's Levee, had that celebration — like its 2021 predecessor — not been suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This is Jason's fourth and final official New Year's poem; his 2021 poem was "Civil Twilight". At the 2020 Levee Jason read his poem "New Year", and he read his "I Woke up In My City" at the 2019 Levee.
Jason's most recent collection of poetry at KFPL is his 2016 Hard Work Cheering Up Sad Machines. You can find more of his poetry and his fiction in the KFPL catalogue.