Wade in the Water
Page 3
UNREST IN BATON ROUGE
after the photo by Jonathan Bachman
Our bodies run with ink dark blood.
Blood pools in the pavement’s seams.
Is it strange to say love is a language
Few practice, but all, or near all speak?
Even the men in black armor, the ones
Jangling handcuffs and keys, what else
Are they so buffered against, if not love’s blade
Sizing up the heart’s familiar meat?
We watch and grieve. We sleep, stir, eat.
Love: the heart sliced open, gutted, clean.
Love: naked almost in the everlasting street,
Skirt lifted by a different kind of breeze.
WATERSHED
200 cows more than 600 hilly acres
property would have been even larger
had J not sold 66 acres to DuPont for
waste from its Washington Works factory
where J was employed
did not want to sell
but needed money poor health
mysterious ailments
Not long after the sale cattle began to act
deranged
footage shot on a camcorder
grainy intercut with static
Images jump repeat sound accelerates
slows down
quality of a horror movie
the rippling shallow water the white ash
trees shedding their leaves
a large pipe
discharging green water
a skinny red cow
hair missing back humped
a dead black calf in snow its eye
a brilliant chemical blue
a calf’s bisected head
liver heart stomachs kidneys
gall bladder some dark some green
cows with stringy tails malformed hooves
lesions red receded eyes suffering slobbering
staggering like drunks
It don’t look like
anything I’ve been into before
I began rising through the ceiling of each floor in the hospital as though I were being pulled by some force outside my own volition. I continued rising until I passed through the roof itself and found myself in the sky. I began to move much more quickly past the mountain range near the hospital and over the city. I was swept away by some unknown force, and started to move at an enormous speed. Just moving like a thunderbolt through a darkness.
R’s taking on the case I found to be inconceivable
It just felt like the right thing to do
a great
opportunity to use my background for people who
really needed it
R: filed a federal suit
pulled permits
land deeds
a letter that mentioned
a substance at the landfill
PFOA
perfluorooctanoic acid
a soap-like agent used in
Scotchgard™
Teflon™
PFOA: was to be incinerated or
sent to chemical waste facilities
not to be flushed into water or sewers
DuPont:
pumped hundreds of thousands of pounds
into the Ohio River
dumped tons of PFOA sludge
into open unlined pits
PFOA:
increased the size of the liver in rats and rabbits
results replicated in dogs
caused birth defects in rats
caused cancerous testicular pancreatic and
liver tumors in lab animals
possible DNA damage from exposure
bound to plasma proteins in blood
was found circulating through each organ
high concentrations in the blood of factory workers
children of pregnant employees had eye defects
dust vented from factory chimneys settled well-beyond
the property line
entered the water table
concentration in drinking water 3x international safety limit
study of workers linked exposure with prostate cancer
worth $1 billion in annual profit
It don’t look like anything I’ve been into before
Every individual thing glowed with life. Bands of energy were being dispersed from a huge universal heartbeat, faster than a raging river. I found I could move as fast as I could think.
DuPont:
did not make this information public
declined to disclose this finding
considered switching to new compound that appeared less toxic
and stayed in the body for a much shorter duration of time
decided against it
decided it needed to find a landfill for toxic sludge
bought 66 acres from a low-level employee
at the Washington Works facility
J needed money
had been in poor health
a dead black calf
its eye chemical blue
cows slobbering
staggering like drunks
I could perceive the Earth, outer space, and humanity from a spacious and indescribable “God’s eye view.” I saw a planet to my left covered with vegetation of many colors, no signs of mankind or any familiar shorelines. The waters were living waters, the grass was living, the trees and the animals were more alive than on earth.
D’s first husband had been a chemist
When you
worked at DuPont in this town you could have
everything you wanted
DuPont paid for his education
secured him a mortgage paid a generous salary
even gave him a free supply of PFOA
He explained that the planet we call Earth really has a proper name, has its own energy, is a true living being, was very strong but has been weakened considerably.
which she used
as soap in the family’s dishwasher
I could feel Earth’s desperate situation. Her aura appeared to be very strange, made me wonder if it was radioactivity. It was bleak, faded in color, and its sound was heart wrenching.
Sometimes
her husband came home sick—fever, nausea, diarrhea,
vomiting—“Teflon flu”
an emergency hysterectomy
a second surgery
I could tell the doctor everything he did upon my arrival down to the minute details of accompanying the nurse to the basement of the hospital to get the plasma for me; everything he did while also being instructed and shown around in Heaven.
Clients called R to say they had received diagnoses of cancer
or that a family member had died
W who had cancer had died of a heart attack
Two years later W’s wife died of cancer
They knew this stuff was harmful
and they put it in the water anyway
I suspect that Earth may be a place of education.
PFOA detected in:
American blood banks
blood or vital organs of:
Atlantic salmon
swordfish
striped mullet
gray seals
common cormorants
Alaskan polar bears
brown pelicans
sea turtles
sea eagles
California sea lions
Laysan albatrosses on a
wildlife refuge in the
middle of the North
Pacific Ocean
Viewing the myriad human faces with an incredible, intimate, and profound love.
This love was all around me, it was everywhere, but at the same time it was also me.
We see a situation
that has gone
from Washington Works
All that was important in life was the love we felt.
to statewide
All that was made, said, done, or
even thought without love was undone.
to everywhere
it’s global
In my particular case, God took the form of a luminous warm water. It does not mean that a luminous warm water is God. It is just that, for me, it was experiencing the luminous warm water that I felt the most connection with the eternal.
POLITICAL POEM
If those mowers were each to stop
at the whim, say, of a greedy thought,
and then the one off to the left
were to let his arm float up, stirring
the air with that wide, slow, underwater
gesture meaning Hello! and You there!
aimed at the one more than a mile away
to the right. And if he in his work were to pause,
catching that call by sheer wish, and send
back his own slow one-armed dance,
meaning Yes! and Here! as if threaded
to a single long nerve, before remembering
his tool and shearing another message
into the earth, letting who can say how long
graze past until another thought, or just the need to know,
might make him stop and look up again at the other,
raising his arm as if to say something like Still?
and Oh! and then to catch the flicker of joy
rise up along those other legs and flare
into another bright Yes! that sways a moment
in the darkening air, their work would carry them
into the better part of evening, each mowing
ahead and doubling back, then looking up to catch
sight of his echo, sought and held
in that instant of common understanding,
the God and Speed of it coming out only after
both have turned back to face to the sea of Yet
and Slow. If they could, and if what glimmered
like a fish were to dart back and forth across
that wide wordless distance, the day, though gone,
would never know the ache of being done.
If they thought to, or would, or even half-wanted,
their work—the humming human engines
pushed across the grass, and the grass, blade
after blade, assenting—would take forever.
But I love how long it would last.
IV.
ETERNITY
Landscape Painting
It is as if I can almost still remember.
As if I once perhaps belonged here.
The mountains a deep heavy green, and
The rocky steep drop to the waters below.
The peaked roofs, the white-plastered
Brick. A clothesline in a neighbor’s yard
Made of sticks. The stone path skimming
The ridge. A ladder asleep against a house.
What is the soul allowed to keep? Every
Birth, every small gift, every ache? I know
I have knelt just here, torn apart by loss. Lazed
On this grass, counting joys like trees: cypress,
Blue fir, dogwood, cherry. Ageless, constant,
Growing down into earth and up into history.
Lama Temple
It was a shock to be allowed in, for once
Not held back by a painted iron fence.
And to take it in with just my eyes (No Photos
Signs were discreet, yet emphatic). Coins,
Bills on a tray. Two women and then a man
Bowed before a statue to pray. Outside
Above the gates, a sprung balloon
And three kites swam east on a high fast
Current. And something about a bird
Flapping hard as it crossed my line of sight—
The bliss it seemed to make and ride without
Ever once gliding or slowing—the picture of it
Meant, suddenly, youth, and I couldn’t help it,
I had to look away.
Nanluoguxiang Alley
Every chance I get, every face I see, I find myself
Searching for a glimpse of myself, my daughter, my sons.
More often, I find there former students, old lovers,
Friends I knew once and had until now forgotten. My
Sisters, a Russian neighbor, a red-haired American actor.
And on and on, uncannily, as though all of us must be
Buried deep within each other.
Songzhuang Art Village
You pull canvases from racks: red daisies,
Peonies in a blue vase, an urn of lilies
Like spirits flown from the dead. A self-
Portrait in a white dress, faceless but for one eye,
And all around you what could be empty
Coffins or guitar cases, or dark leaves
On a swirling sea. On a column in a black frame
Hangs a photo of your mother, a smiling
Girl in an army coat. Can any of us save ourselves,
You once wrote, save another? Below her,
All beard, practically, and crevassed brow,
Tolstoy stares in the direction of what once
Must have seemed the future.
Mutianyu, Great Wall
Farther ahead, another tourist loses his footing
And grabs hold of a brick,
which comes off
In his hand, crumbles where it lands.
ASH
Strange house we must keep and fill.
House that eats and pleads and kills.
House on legs. House on fire. House infested
With desire. Haunted house. Lonely house.
House of trick and suck and shrug.
Give-it-to-me house. I-need-you-baby house.
House whose rooms are pooled with blood.
House with hands. House of guilt. House
That other houses built. House of lies
And pride and bone. House afraid to be alone.
House like an engine that churns and stalls.
House with skin and hair for walls.
House the seasons singe and douse.
House that believes it is not a house.
BEATIFIC
I watch him bob across the intersection,
Squat legs bowed in black sweatpants.
I watch him smile at nobody, at our traffic
Stopped to accommodate his slow going.
His arms churn the air. His comic jog
Carries him nowhere. But it is as if he hears
A voice in our idling engines, calling him
Lithe, Swift, Prince of Creation. Every least leaf
Shivers in the sun, while we sit, bothered,
Late, captive to this thing commanding
Wait for this man. Wait for him.
CHARITY
She is like a squat old machine,
Off-kilter but still chugging along
The uphill stretch of sidewalk
On Harrison Street, handbag slung
Crosswise and, I’m guessing, heavy.
And oh, the set of her face, her brow’s
Profound tracks, her mouth cinched,
Lips pressed flat. Watching her
Bend forward to tussle with gravity,
Watching the berth she allows each
Foot (as if one is not on civil
Terms with the other), watching
Her shoulders braced as if lashed
By step after step after step, and
Her eyes’ determination not to
Shift, or blink, or rise, I think:
I am you, one day out of five,
Tired, empty, hating what I carry
But afraid to lay it down, stingy,
Angry, doing violence to others
By the sheer freight of my gloom,
Halfway home, wanting to stop, to quit
But keeping going mostly out of spite.
IN YOUR CONDITION
That whole time away, I stayed dizzy. Every
where,
Meats whirled round in a pit. Waiters crashed in
And out like the tide with trays and trays of fish.
Every chance, I slept: in the bathroom between courses,
A whole half-hour laid out like a corpse atop the bed.
I saw the beach from a castle in the hills. I climbed there
On Sunday carrying my purse, snapping the same pictures
From the year before, to be polite. Windows that belonged
To the queen maintain their perfect shape, though the glass
She would have paced behind is gone. Grass spreads
Like intrigue where once were rugs, and a double metal rail
Suggests a wall. Along a hall and up slick winding steps,
There was a view down into the valley, but I couldn’t linger.
The baby kept me queasy, hungry, made my dress hike up
Though I was only eight weeks in. At a tavern on my last night,
I had to stand outside to breathe. I ordered bottle after bottle
Of water, though the red wine shimmered like nectar.
Flying home, I snuck a wedge of brie, and wept
Through a movie starring Angelina Jolie.
4½
Morning finds her curled like a prawn
Around a stuffed blue Pegasus, or the smallest
Prawn-pink lion. Or else she’s barging
Into my room, and leaning in close so
It’s her hair I wake to—that coarse, dark
Heaven of knots and purple fluff. And
She’s hungry, but first she has to pee—
“Pee! Pee!” she sings, hopping in place, trying
to staunch off the wild ravenous river
she carries, until I’m awake for real, saying
“Go! Go! Hurry before you wet the floor!”
And then she tries, and succeeds, or else stands
Bereft, relieved, as a pool trickles out
Around her feet. She’s like an island
Made of rock, with one lone tree at the top
Of the only mountain. She’s like the sole
Incongruous goat tethered to the tree,
Smiling almost as you approach, scraping
The ground with its horns, and then—
Lickety split—lurching hard, daring
The rope to snap. She’s hungry. She wants