Book Read Free

Rift Zone

Page 4

by Tess Taylor


  in the lava garden. Clumsy

  arthropods, fat pollinators.

  Equal in mystery: I am a mother.

  What does it mean to belong to July?

  Blackberry, thistle, nectarine shadow.

  How have I survived even this life?

  At street corners sometimes

  time hauls me under

  like the stone guzzle

  where the land’s crust

  subducts into sea.

  At the bay, encampment, encampment.

  Dispossessed, dispossessed. Sometimes in my mind

  ghost Okies still clatter

  uphill in ghost Model Ts.

  Rosie the Riveters smoke

  in postwar sun.

  At the corner, Happ- Tailor—

  the y fallen; hapless.

  A lizard runs by.

  At the beach yesterday I heard

  seven languages; corvid & seal bark.

  Last year they tore down

  the last town trailer park.

  A stream gutters under my house.

  A stream follows the path of a faultline.

  Our gravestones are signposts to everywhere:

  Yun, Kobayashi, Menendez, Revere.

  The Sunset Mausoleum Welcomes All Visitors.

  The backhoe inters the arriviste dead.

  What’s the name of the stream in Huichin Ohlone?

  The question lingers. Oyster clouds open.

  Our coastlines are swallowed

  are hollowed like vowels—

  EMELINE AT SIX WEEKS

  You howl, all vowel.

  When you babble,

  your elocution is clear

  as a downhill stream.

  With the eyes of a prophet

  you gaze beyond us,

  and when you cry

  your wail is tremendous:

  You stage revolution

  on behalf of the stars.

  UNTITLED WITH SADNESS & SUCKLE

  Tonight’s emergency

  is not emergent.

  News that stays news but is not a poem.

  Beating. Shooting. Children in cages.

  Like when I was at Emily’s

  watching cops chase Rodney King.

  Same nectarine light.

  Sometimes I think that all

  privilege is

  is some safer vantage

  for watching the trauma, America, happen.

  What human words will I use to explain?

  In the dream I am screaming:

  My daughter is asking me why?

  Now the baby she is

  squalls awake & I haul

  myself out to offersuckle

  oxytocinprovisional safety—

  we are animal

  in the broken ecosystem

  her head smells like milk on my breast

  TRAIN THROUGH COLMA

  But will anyone teach

  the new intelligence to miss

  the apricot trees

  that bloomed each spring

  along these tracks?

  Or the way afternoons

  blazed with creosote

  & ponderosa?

  Spring evenings flare

  with orange pixels

  in the bay-scented valley.

  Where in the algorithm

  will they account for

  the rippling ponies

  that roamed outside Fremont?

  When the robots have souls,

  will they feel longing?

  When they feel longing,

  will they write poems?

  IV

  We wrote this book for those friends who want to learn a bit about the geologic foundations of their surroundings . . . we avoided the more rarified topics that only geologists enjoy.

  We did our best to avoid crossing the delicate line that separates simplification from oversimplification.

  —Roadside Geology of Northern California

  RAW NOTES FOR A POEM NOT YET WRITTEN

  —San Pablo Ave., El Cerrito, CA

  I walk by the

  Japanese

  ruins

  gated

  behind

  cracked pavement lot

  where the bare hills

  “a riot of poppies”

  frame

  little sh

  wild lupine

  geranium

  hothouse thorns

  They never came back

  their white neighbor saved

  (not all)

  of their business

  in the windows

  torn rice paper

  half a Shinto shrine

  Sixty years later

  toppled

  where they were taken

  last of those buildings

  downin

  O my town.

  We perch on

  what was done here.

  My best friend’s grandmother

  myfirstboyfriend’sgrandmother

  I knew it later

  they never spoke of it—(to me)—

  whiskey crates

  & damp mold

  of abandoned places

  Coyote bush rattles: seems

  to be asking

  who will they take next

  when are they coming?

  ONCE AGAIN AT NONVIOLENCE TRAINING, 2017

  Because the white supremacists are coming

  because the threat

  becauseCharlottesville

  & if you don’t who will

  & you never know what baton what chemical

  we are marching.

  We plan chants.

  Make signs at church.

  Large assembly: bodies, linoleum, soup.

  Cardboard & markers & salt fog drifting.

  We bear forward our fury and sorrow.

  Estuary sanctuary room for our hope lights.

  HATE IS TOXIC TO ALL LIVING CREATURES.

  Shalom, salaam. We root our anger.

  Are alive together.

  Must now be shields to one another.

  & John said: Be a witness.

  We brace one another. Plant our feet.

  In fog, promise

  to stay together.

  We will not raise our hands. We are not leaving.

  LOMA PRIETA, 1989

  then in chorus up the risers rose

  & for a moment we were riding

  high & tottering on the bareback crust.

  We were girls

  preparing for our concert

  so even when the raw ground buckled

  & bucked us up we went on singing.

  Our conductor led us into the courtyard

  & in four parts we sang a poem by e. e. cummings

  even as we learned that all around us

  whole neighborhoods & a freeway had collapsed.

  Baudelaire wrote under von Haussmann

  that a city’s form is always changing

  faster than the longings of a mortal heart.

  As the sharp quake kicked our lungs

  we learned again & for the first time what

  it is to live on things

  bound to collapse. Later I’d read

  Roadside Geology of Northern California

  funny yellowing book my father treasured:

  I’d learn rift zonesubductionslab pull—

  Then as October dusk drew down we sang

  although the very bridge

  that was our pathway home had sandwiched

  between its decks a man a fleet of cars.

  Later I watched dismantled piece by piece

  the last of those 1930s girders—

  week by week torn down as I assembled

  the cells of a new daughter in my body.

  That night as upthrust settled

  we sang on, still children

  alive inside the music’s oxygen. Even in the face

  of devastation

  we must make art: This was the lesson

  Bet
h Avakian offered then

  without a way of knowing

  how much it would mean to me

  these years later. In the space

  the freeway was, is bay.

  The new bridge glitters.

  They named the quake Loma Prieta,

  which means ‘dark hill’—

  it represents a great collapsing,

  though in my heart & memory

  it now leans toward song—

  SONG IN WHICH WE YET SIDESTEP DISASTER

  for Taylor

  Even stars are formed by loss. You know

  astronomers believe that galaxies are forged

  out of huge collapsing stars—

  hollow, imploding on themselves.

  As stars die the very charge

  of their collapse sets matter loose:

  This lost energy becomes a splatter

  of elemental goo spinning in space.

  If this is hard to see, think of a tub,

  the one our kids play in each night.

  When it drains, the energy that’s lost

  in gravity’s huge suck is turned to sound. Sound:

  what lost force becomes. Sound:

  the gurgle left behind by entropy.

  Think: collapsing stars

  forging a galactic paint

  of elements & energy;

  nickel, copper, iron, ore

  of which each new world is made.

  Our life is splattered star.

  Or, my love, we’re spun of losses.

  Is this why

  we sit up on the shore

  & hear the ocean smash the rocks?

  The air rings with lost force we call the waves.

  Ten years ago I gave my life to you,

  & lost some of the life I had before.

  We marked promises & gave

  each other mined-up core

  to wear a while, minted now as rings.

  Guise of permanence, to enclose a life.

  I also know that when I write tonight

  I only chase the pattern that I hear.

  Something I meant spins farther off.

  And: You didn’t die that awful year.

  I haven’t lost you yet.

  My love, I count the lucky stars.

  I lie, rocking on your breath.

  ELK AT TOMALES BAY

  Nimble, preserved together,

  milkweed-white rears upturned,

  female tule elk

  bowed into rustling foxtails.

  Males muscled over the slopes,

  jostling mantles, marking terrain.

  Their antlers clambered wide,

  steep as open gorges.

  As they fed, those branches twitched,

  sensory, delicate,

  yet as one buck reared his head

  squaring to look at us

  his antlers & his gaze

  held suddenly motionless.

  Further out, the skeleton.

  The tar paper it seemed to lie on

  was hide.

  Vertebrae like redwood stumps.

  In an uneven heart-shaped cavern

  a coccyx curled to its tip.

  Ribs fanned open,

  hollow, emptied of organs.

  In the bushes, its skull:

  sockets & mandible,

  sinuses, loose teeth.

  All bare now except

  that fur the red brown color

  of a young boy’s head & also

  of wild iris stalks in winter

  still clung to the drying scalp.

  Below the eye’s rim sagged

  flat as a bicycle tire.

  The form was sinking away.

  The skin loosened, becoming other,

  shedding the mask that hides

  but must also reveal a creature.

  Off amid cliffs & hills

  some unfleshed force roamed free.

  In the wind, I felt

  the half-life I watched watch me.

  Elk, I said, I see

  you abandon this life, this earth.

  I stood for a time with the bones.

  ETYMOLOGY WITH TECTONIC PLATES

  i

  Faultline we say & what is this but tendril

  to fault to foul a falling short a failing

  to blame to blemish

  e.g. a damaged place

  the word also making visible

  at least in part the unimaginable

  moving plate: Earthskull

  where it buckles

  to trip to falter err or blunder:

  boundary

  in continuity

  or stone

  Fault we say hiking chert and basalt,

  cracked seafloor

  under fog.

  ii

  Later I

  rework these lines, chart

  lost pangeas, worlds

  emerging at the brinkor try

  to trace the crevices of mind

  to sort

  what rubbleall the shift

  made visible

  linen thread or cord

  e.g. also the spool or snare

  the mark or stroke or way of making bare

  the staveto order

  to trace esp. a band or furrow

  the measure of a verse or hymn

  to bound

  to limn

  to lineatea song

  in a harsh climate

  to crack

  to realign

  SONG WITH WILD PLUM & THORN

  The morning is cold & the world is hard

  but even in fog it is still midsummer.

  The kids need to play & the grocery budget

  ticks toward nothing the way

  the world tips towards doomsday.

  The walls in my chest will not let me breathe

  & all the screens flicker & still answer nothing, so

  I take the children down to the bike path,

  & with buckets & a few blessed hours

  wander a corridor of weedy fruit.

  Blackberry, wild plum, all overhung:

  we leaners or gleaners half-acrobatic

  lost among boughs—alone till I notice

  others stopping

  with buckets or tiffins

  in many languages

  along these tracks picking

  what weeds we still hold in common

  as dry heat builds

  and fog thins.In common, in common—

  the thought feels strangely radical,

  crumb or bloom beyond

  loneliness. For a while, I feel

  entirely animal, little forager

  hungry for fruit.

  Black sparkle, pale pit & thorn—

  weeds binding

  some world together.

  A word appears in my mind

  holdfast hold fast—

  sprout—raw volunteer—

  for a while it is hand to mouth & to bucket

  breathing—still here still here—

  AUBADE WITH FAULTLINE & BROKEN PIPE

  & when at night there is an earthquake

  & in the morning the upended gutter

  flows out through the broken mouth of sidewalk

  & the freed stream splays & loosens

  asphalt & Key Route grows impassable; when

  this muddy torrent now recalls

  the way in marcheswe the people

  do reroute the streets, I remember

  how the pressures exerted

  by earthforce are continual & invisible,

  how eruptionsare instantiation.

  Bataille believed the sacred lies in interruption

  the festival tent unloosed & flapping

  after the hurricane

  what hurricanewhat interruption

  in an epoch of pressure

  unburied water claims its path

  a force acquires

  a voiceb

  a valence

  also: It sings as it goes<
br />
  AUBADE WITH REDWOOD

  If we were to go

  if the house fell in an earthquake

  if fire, if fire

  & we were burned out

  I imagine the redwood

  in what we call our

  backyard

  would keep living.

  I call myself I

  but below its bigness am

  small

  eye & animal

  near forest fractal.

  Look: The gash

  in its bark

  thickens to heal

  on our neighbor’s fence.

  Look: The green hummingbirds

  take us as neighbors.

  I GAVE MY LOVE A STORY

  Now it is night again, child on my chest.

  I croon & my song drifts you towards rest.

  As I chant in darkness you are also learning

  to hear minor scales chime & fourths falling.

  Together we hover inside a melody

  many dead mothers once sung before.

  Tonight the cherry still has no stone.

  Tonight I rock you out of bodily memory

  & these songs are older than we are,

  & this tune I hum is wise as a virus;

  it makes me a vector

  for rhythm & cadence—

  (tonight the chicken still has no bone):

  The song lives on, persists & persists—

  PUNCTUATIONS & WIND

  Then once again someone is shot

  at a school by a sniper by police in a movie theater

  & the many homeless

  are hustled & hunted.

  You read how your clothes are sewn by slaves

  your dinner fished by slaves

  your fruit picked by starving children.

  Mostly you don’t get away.

  Mostly you raise the children you have,

  afraid of no health care, of losing

  the one goodish job you’ve finally got.

  Mostly you keep your nose to the grindstone.

  Your heart flails

  a thick fish in your throat.

  You have felt for a long time that someone is watching:

  The administration is eroding your benefits.

  But you are lucky, so you try to feel lucky.

  By the numbers you have always lived

  in an apartheid state.

  You look at your child.

  Read reports of the tear gas.

  Text a friend. Cry at night.

  Some days you march when people are marching

  some batter windowssome are hit

  things are cancelled:

  The year has been dry

 

‹ Prev