a descent into poetry insanity |
consider as rain falls, day after day, week after week, rising ankle deep— knee deep, waist deep— consider how precious it is. here, where water flows and gathers, we shunt it away into the spaces between roads spill ways and swamps, and pools hidden by wisteria and magnolias and dogwoods, hiding it, keeping it away. we are spoiled by abundance. but water is precious. and in dryer corners, where floods rise and fall in hours instead of weeks, and plants horde water, before it disappears in heat waves, sucked into desert instead of shunting it away it's gathered, used up over and over. we're here, in the flood. water doesn't feel precious. it rises neck deep, chin deep—rising until everything drowns, grass and trees and telephone poles and power lines and houses, undermined, floating away. soon the world will be overrun with water. and we will tiptoe across bridges with water flowing inches beneath, and face roads turned river until our dreams turn to water, flowing, rising, while the rain falls. so precious. so deadly. nightmare made life. line count: 48 I think this one came out of driving through the roads during flash flooding and the dreams that came afterward. And being born in Arizona but living in Tennessee. |