Dan Eltringham
From Off/Set
Hating traveling & explorers insufficiently to offset
the burning of being
here, where one longs to be all
the
same
not the same as all staying in in in-difference,
setting off the sentence loosed out from itself
or firecrackers in the street
caught, yes once again, in yet another eddy
breathstop in becoming’s
onward 8-ball rush,
in at the net,
hawkeye lies
& back to the baseline calculations
history translated to the time of the life of a tree
calculated as the precise antithesis of a certain calculable part
of Cambo, of Whitehaven, cleanly syllogisms stagger equivalence,
like for not-like somehow alike.
Thinking of it, the appetite & aftervoid right through
its density & pressure,
living & dying in alter
nation but burning their way to the end:
ineluctable returning to start; lost & damaged,
deepening futures at closing speed & shunted sideways,
a pine out of place: knee-jerk translation to a greater scale
(of abstraction)
putting it plainly at last
offset plantations razed right through
at one credit per tonne
mapping differences of deferral,
of demurral, we should say, differences of how we differently
disavow but all at once come to see the necromass spun into soil
a whole other displacement surfacing the imago
(mycorrhizal supply lines)
no-one asked the fungi if they wanted this
but they’ve been reading us for millennia
wrapt & wrought through skin & cell
and the lucky ones, spinning out our thought.
These pending processes,
death is slow, time is short
by close of play today i want to see
vascular veins laid open & the oil leaching out
the money hill unmounted still
Varoufakis was undressing
the global economy with his eyes,
remember,
was that a meme or before
losses cut down the coast
(burn it all down)
crack open the methane lattice
sit back & wait for the feedback to kick
or hold your ear to the pulsing syncopation
of a storm drain in spate:
sea & ice
ice & ocean
dialectical counterpoint
call & answer song
read by measure, watch the levels
as fossils agitate in the lobby
assets stranded attest Deepwater
attest Gorgon
attest Sunrise
over bitumen horizontal tarlands
keep turning
frack me sideways / this is not a test
red wines for red meat stupid
peak time passed silt liquefaction limits
ongoing full-price fares extinctive this city on stilts
i want to see
the layers of money inherent in the land
at least then we’d know where to start.
Andrea Carter Brown
In Praise of Natural Disaster
I
1993
Tops of trees on a sea of gray, white
houses up to second-story windows
in water. sinuous ribbon of river
bed, bank, levee, berm overrun
by rains they can't contain.
Each morning we hungrily comb Times
and Tribune for the latest installment
in this summer's soap opera. The sheer
scale is hard to absorb. Six inches in
one hour, tens of thousands of square
miles, millions of dollars, a sixth
Great Lake spawned over the Gopher,
Coyote. Jayhawk, Hawkeye, Cornhusker
and Show Me! states, countless dead cows,
hogs and snakes, and to date, forty-three
humans. Returning to sodden homes,
veterans claim the stench exceeds wartime
memory. El Niño, Raccoon, Prairie
du Rocher, Bermuda High. We are launched
on a crash course in geography, geology,
and the pseudo-science, meteorology.
Throw in Saints Joseph, Genevieve,
and Louis, left behind by the French missionaries
who first wrested this land by faith. Tack on
Manifest Destiny, civil engineering, fluid
mechanics, agribusiness. Vice-
and then the President visit, promise more
than they can afford; scores of porta-potties
fly in and ten thousand pounds
of dog food from Ohio. Addicted,
I cannot get enough and, in my heart
of hearts, want the worst to come, be it
Ol' Man River stranding the meander
he once created or a city left high and dry,
deprived of its lifeblood. We see signs
all around us the world is not
as it was, but our own lives seem
to slip away without amounting to much
and we spend our days muddling
through, our struggles looming large
because they are ours. So there's nothing
like a good forest fire, earthquake
or flood to cut us back down
to size. Which is why I envy
that mud-splattered woman sprawled
against sandbags. For weeks she's fought
night and day to keep the river at bay,
but at her feet we can see the current
bubble up, eating under what it could not
bust through. How lucky she is, how blessed
her exhausted slumber. When she wakes,
her world will have changed
and all of us, with it.
II
2023
Three decades later, reading
those last four lines, I wonder
how could I have been so cavalier?
Floods, fires, tornados, earthquakes
have become so common; flags fly at half-mast
every day: we're never sure which disaster
is to blame. Constant war; floods
of immigrants; schools, houses
of worship, clubs, parks no longer
safe. Images of destruction
fill our minds. Polar vortex,
heat dome, global warming, climate change,
live shooter drill, live shooter . . .
new terms enter our vocabulary.
Disaster once seemed unusual,
beyond our control,
something that happens
to us, the way the French
called their loss to Germany in 1940
un désastre or le débâcle.
Translation not needed.
Now we understand we have
ourselves to blame. These days
I look back on the woman who wrote
"How lucky she is, how blessed
her exhausted slumber" longingly.
If only we could rebuild our lives
trusting the world to behave
as it always had, extreme
weather events rare, or seldom.
Last spring I stood
on the banks of the Mississippi
where it had flooded in 1993.
"The Great Flood" it was called
at the time, for it hadn't happened
within human memory. Push and pull
of tugs and barges. Reconstructed
locks and dams contain the mighty stream
so sleepy river towns like Dubuque
and Joplin, the birthplace of Mark Twain,
leveled by a tornado since that flood,
can be, busy with the ebb and flow of life.
Where is that nameless woman
whose efforts moved me so long ago?
Did she rebuild in place? Move further
inland? Up on the bluffs? Leave
the area entirely for a new life?
On the Battery
In a scant hour, the shade retreats
across macadam and sunlight strikes
the silver-bottomed Crimean linden
leaves uplifted by a lazy midday breeze.
With stout trunks of scarred bark
and heart-shaped serrated greens
cascading toward the ground, they thrive
on this man-made wind-swept walk where
salt invades fresh and a polished pink sea
wall ten feet tall thinks it will protect
the land from ocean's onslaught. I see this
from above, watching the sky cloud up
and brightness fade. Yesterday it rained
hard all day, and the day before, and late
today they promise more. Storm sewers
back up, overflow. A rat squashed
by a tire straddles, spread-eagled,
the still damp blacktop; the run-off,
opaque with mud and grime. Will
the river ever again be clear, clean?