we carved asphalt lines into Mother Earth’s
face. If I tilt my head and look outside
my window to the green beside
this roadway, I can still see the land
down. I can see
men, jumping from tops
of hills and winding themselves around
trees, slithering
through this old forest with breath
caught in stasis to chase this
evening’s meal – a buck standing
unawares of red men ready to
break apart his flesh and inject his
life into their veins. Men,
absorbing strength caught inside
antlers, carried in the arms of blood
rivers emptying their mouths
into venison flesh. Men
and women sitting and speaking
stories into the air around
sublime, scorching fires whose
ghosts
I can still smell – wretched charcoal
perfume released into twilight,
pressed from Death’s heartbeat
and distilled into smoke. And from this,
the cycle always continued –
Death cleansing
the path for Life’s footsteps
to fall upon uncluttered stones, willful
and silent, to march past death drives
and Freudian thought before such notions
were birthed onto paper. Those
footprints are trapped in the hillsides,
and I can see them. Beneath the mosaic of
leaf, earth, and road, I can hear
them. Drowned by filthy sediment and
hovering underneath windows of
steel and glass, I can smell them. And
I can still hear the three sisters dancing
their dance of yellow, pale, and green, a
plant DNA, concentric circle mound, feed
the children of another season dance
which still echoes underneath solid
grey skin, pebbled-and-tarred
lines tattooed upon our mother’s face
so that we may travel her surfaces
faster – but
where are we really going? Twenty-first
century change jangles in our ears,
drives us to drive everyday to survive. We
pace asphalt, walk concrete, stomp
stones laid to recall centuries before our
charcoal and steel dawn, and I must
wonder –
when all of this buckles and breaks, will
our half-tone ghosts be seen walking
midnights between trees inside forests
resurrected from the days of Mingo
and Algonquin song – or will we
leave no trace, our steps erased by our
dragging unseen green umbilical chords
behind us, severed from our Mother by
our black asphalt blades?
Original poem appears at: http://ravenswingpoetry.com/2009/05/13/asphalt/
