Monday, September 18, 2023

New poems in Flyway: Journal of Writing & Environment

 

There are two poems from the new manuscript,

The Next World,

in the latest issue of

Flyway: Journal of Writing & Environment

 

 

 

Flyway publishes work that explores

the intersection of human experience

and the environment.

 


I am writing this on Sunday, September 17th, 2023,

during the time when thousands of climate activists

are marching in NYC and around the world

to end the use of fossil fuels.  

(March to End Fossil Fuels)

 

The first poem is about a flood that was labeled “a five-hundred-year flood” back in '93, when it overran the city of Des Moines, Iowa. The city's waterworks were inundated and there was no water in the taps available for almost the entire city for about six weeks. 

India

Military helicopters constantly circling...community sandbagging...cars floating away into a roil of muddy water... 

What was “every five hundred years” back then has become the new normal. 

New York State
 

I tried to write a poem about that flood with the idea of memory as prophesy for what was to come, what has now arrived…

 

Rain, The Ceaseless Sea, The Water Works Drowned & Prophesy: how the world was made

 

Ever since the flood, the long Cassandra scream.

Balls of water for nine months, smashing onto

 

concrete, roofs, battering leaves, then water

suddenly everywhere lapped up to the highway’s

 

shoulder as we drove pell-mell into the city

before the water cut us off from home. Sea north,

 

south, soy and corn waving beneath water like

kelp. Ever since the flood, Cassandra pleading,

 

this is coming, this is coming soon everywhere…

 

The rest of the poem can be found in Flyway here.

 

 

The second poem is the last poem written in the manuscript, back in April, after the last snow here in Eugene, when a murder of crows arrived back in the neighborhood – their calls, their black wings, their black beaks, their piercing eyes – and connected everything together; a polyphony of sounds, smells, colors, questions…

 

 

What is Crow (Polyphony)

 

Crows fill the bare maples, between baroque trills and

iron-crust-against-plaster croaks, they dip their heads,

swipe beaks, black to cold branch: What is wood? Wood

 

was one of the solutions soil came up with when it was

asked to invent the sky. And what is sky? The gravity

source that pulled black wings out of crow bodies, that

 

now whirl and scatter and land on the rehab lawn across

the street…

 

The rest of the poem can be found here.
 

 More on The Climate Emergency:

 
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