Today's poem brings a renewal of a frightening childhood memory.
I couldn't have been very old when this incident occurred, but the memory of it is still vivid.
The fire seemed to spring up suddenly along the railroad, the flames were threatening our house ... we had no running water, no telephone ... no fire department, as a matter of fact.
We stood and watched in horror. Then, suddenly, the fire seemed to veer away. It was over. We had survived.
The poem:
THE ASHES ARE STILL HOT
When a white-hot summer sun
hangs high in a cloudless sky,
when it must be thought
there can be no more burning
in this poor punished land,
there comes the crackling,
leaping, lurching dance
of the very flames of hell,
hangs high in a cloudless sky,
when it must be thought
there can be no more burning
in this poor punished land,
there comes the crackling,
leaping, lurching dance
of the very flames of hell,
consuming sere weak willows
along the thirsting creek,
leaping to fence-line elms,
sending their leaves towering
along the thirsting creek,
leaping to fence-line elms,
sending their leaves towering
like swarms of angry hornets,
smoke and fire entwining
in an eerie, deadly spiral
from which rain the hot seeds
smoke and fire entwining
in an eerie, deadly spiral
from which rain the hot seeds
of more on our shingled house.
We stand there in the garden,
my grandmother praying, and I,
a child of only four, crying.
We stand there in the garden,
my grandmother praying, and I,
a child of only four, crying.
Wind, born of the fire itself,
where there has been no wind
for long, dry, dragging days,
snatches up the pitching flames,
where there has been no wind
for long, dry, dragging days,
snatches up the pitching flames,
takes them away from the house.
My grandmother sees a miracle,
but to me it’s a nightmare, for,
see, the ashes are still hot.
My grandmother sees a miracle,
but to me it’s a nightmare, for,
see, the ashes are still hot.
© 1997
(originally published in Block's Magazine)
Today's word: towering
No comments:
Post a Comment