D.E. Steward
Flowstone
“I am what I read, have read, am writing” (John Kinsella)
Buoyed by the glory of Shostakovich’s Fifth, the Largo and the Allegro non troppo
The magnificently pensive middle theme of Beethoven’s Piano Sonata 30, Opus 109
As if umami infused
Succinctly: “Humanity has wiped out 60% of mammals, birds, fish and reptiles since 1970” (The Guardian Weekly)
Cogent causation, the ineluctable eustasy (sea level rise)
With ravenous economic development forcing the rest
Wetlands, trees and ground cover topsoil graded off
The dismal urban drosscapes
Beton brutal
Nitrate and phosphate agrochemicals saturating streams, estuaries and rivers
Plastics and trash the oceans
Road traffic universally increasing
Thickest in cities where air carries increasing particulate matter, it’s the new tobacco
While noise and light pollution spreads wide from the urban swellAs world population bloats toward four billion more by the end of the century with three billion of those born to Africa
Derelict machines and construction trash dumps
The brownfields, vast hardscape tracts of broken asphalt and concrete with landfills everywhere, often responding to water table rise
“grid seepage, currents distracted / side flow, multiple laterals” (A. R. Ammons)
Single-species tree and crop plantations and turf farms protected chemically replace mixed agriculture
All with the petty revulsions of strip malls, leaf blowers, windblown plastic bags
"Destruction of the natural world is not the result of global capitalism, industrialization, 'Western civilization' or any flaw in human institutions. It is a consequence of the evolutionary success of an exceptionally rapacious primate." (John Gray)
Sixty years on mining the bitcoin burns more electricity than that generated by the whole world’s solar panels
An inkling from being caught in the open for long minutes in a red dust storm on the Llanos Esticados in 1958
Needing to go prone face in crossed arms to keep from choking
“And knowing what time is, and where it goes. / Deep on the ocean floor, the lava flows” (Clive James)
Then living quietly in the presence of high mountains
“And the warm wind is tender and supple. / And the body marvels at its lightness” (Anna Akhmatova)
The improbable complexity and riveting beauty of Heinz Holliger’s enhancement of Alessandro Marcello’s, the eighteenth-century Venetian, Oboe Concerto
Resonant and driving like Kampala Highlife one night in 1963 Uganda
African days before AIDS when only rarely people talked of “slims,” when the disease hazards were bilharzia and malaria, and most maladies for a flying doctor in Lesotho were bacterial infections and broken bones
Would see happy Heinz Holliger, nearly an octogenarian now, almost dancing onto the tram, early balding with a token pony tail, oboe case in hand, after Roger Federer, the best known Basler of the era
Holliger’s definitions of it being the ultimate meaning of the oboe
In the manner of Calabi-Yau space’s extra dimensions within the universe
Beyond
“We fly in now, our voyage just begun – / To catch the giant sling swung by the sun” (Clive James)
Visiting lesbian friends after an international flight, no shower proffered, a tentative meal in the kitchen, and then relegation to sleeping in their barn
Their amiable dogs stayed around with me out there and I found a garden hose to wash, it was pleasant with a blanket on that summer’s red-clover aromatic hay
Maybe such disconnectedness is another self-obscured mystery, or maybe it only has to do with others’ identities not mine
If I’d only known I’d ’ve
Flip the gender coin and puzzle over the mano á mano aspect of getting along with other men in situations with the sense that often when two confident men converse, one walks away the winner
To take a person’s karma onto yourself in order to enhance yours gets complicated
We still kill one another
Thunder in the clouds
Ammoniate cow piss stink
Among trash along the tracks were spikes, tie plates and other railroad gubbins
Busy end of summer cardinals tsping and calling to one another in the early dusk before they go to roost off in an evergreen
At dawn a spider web with twelve-foot silk filament guy line twelve feet off to a white pine’s drooping bough tip
The rising sun’s sparkle on the web itself
As if “lofting / you beyond all binds and terminals” (Ammons)
Plate-sized web strung between twig-tip points on a six-foot spruce
Wonder, in a mild koan, how the weaver reached the high pine bough last night
Gerald Stern notices such details in nature, sometimes with the no-holds-barred energy of a Christian ecstasy poet
Of the eighteen NYC Barnes & Noble “Events” listed in a February 1, 2019 display ad only two are readily recognizable names
“we are in America and it is all right not to be elsewhere” (Frank O’Hara)
Look up at those oak beams that were cut with a two-man ramp saw and hewn by people who were around for the American RevolutionSet there as if forever like the classical splendor of Haydn’s “London,” the 104th
By those who farmed by fieldstone walls with scythes and hayforks, some of whom walked off westward through the Cumberland Gap
Men in blue who carried an Enfield 1853 rifled musket south over the Potomac
Or may have lived their life on farms in one county and died toothless at fifty-five
The interval between that rural past of ours and now confounds those who remember
“way beyond gusting down the long changes” (Ammons)
When water trickles down a cave wall it may leave a translucent curtain of minerals called flowstone
Flowstone containing uranium decays steadily allowing accurate dating of wall painting beneath the curtain
The painters were exactly like us of course
The strangeness for us on the live side of the screen, off in front of the flowstone, is that their consciousness, both animals’ and their artists’, are inexplicitly present but absolutely gone
Tussocky grass shaggily appearing through the melting snow under southwest wind blowing cumulus
It is another March now
“In one month / the twigs will be shining” (Gerald Stern)
And we will go on ahead further into our seasons
Without hindrances except for our era’s recently crisp, sinister uneasiness
Woke
Two poets at a time one after the other for a half hour or so every day, early
Pages turned in curiosity about the next poem
Like following around a small brown plains-wanderer in central Vics
In Broome out in Western Australia, sunhats, white cars and utes, and roofs
The norm
“Ground baked so hard you can only scrape / and pick at it, occasionally shattering / into sheets and chips...” (John Kinsella)
Contingent with the Great Sandy Desert
Inside 18° South, southwest of the Kimberley Plateau
Back of beyond out there
Broome’s remarkable Japanese Cemetery
The archeology of almost a century of pearl diving
Over nine hundred divers’ graves
From the bends or lost in typhoons
To that coast from their home islands
For the pearl oysters, Pinctada Maxima
A bonanza oblivious to time passed time
“This open-sky / dungeon of colonial heritage” (Kinsella)
The nearly unpolluted southern hemisphere’s blue sky
Confluent with gwander, mulga, dugite, death adder, tiger snake, king browns
Vividly brutal like pig hunting with dogs in New South Wales
An Oklahoma truck meetup out of town to sight in AR15s
And it is a matter of Trump, nearly ninety percent of Cameron County, Pennsylvania, population forty-five hundred
Perhaps a couple of thousand counties from Florida to Nome bend like it
Most of the eighty-eight counties in Ohio alone
Unwoke
Where it’s felt that he’s their best chance at something or other
After all at the 2023 CPAC this weekend as keynoter he proclaimed, “I am your justice, I am your redeemer”
“And if we don’t win we won’t have a country.”
Many of those good people, confident that Trump is for them in their time
Continue to shunt normal practices and ethics off to starboard
“…the chill and lull / of 39,000 feet, for there we felt, I’m not sure / how to say this, somehow American…” (William Matthews, Search Party)
Trumpismo’s smell
The unwoken doom of the world overcome from civility with crowding and conflict
Pushed into camps of affluence glut and deepening poverty
Here encouraged purposefully or not, by the push and blather of the American right dealing backward in realms of historical awareness
In tactics of manipulative greed
If its governing segment manages further crimes of state like Bush II’s torture program after 9/11 and Trump’s Mexican border family separation policy, we’re on the mule run to that, to our particular modes of apartheid and Auschwitz
Their theme an alternate history founded by three and a half centuries of institutionalized slavery, Manifest Destiny’s Indian policies and practice, the Oriental Exclusion Act, the Palmer Raids, McCarthyism, Reagan’s “government is the problem,” and now Trump“Nothing worse than the cold cry of snow” (Kenneth Patchen)
There’s a particular and deep sink into the sinister
State governments are now enacting abortion pill prohibition, debating regulating transgender lives and anti-drag show legislation
And we have woke books in the schools controversies, the House’s absurd weaponization committee and a general tenor of rightwing paranoia on the loose
Their no holds barred disputations about wokeness may go deeper than our social democratic instincts
What an implausible cast of self-promotion politicians are out there now
Whelping libertarian/anarchists and the avoidant personalities supporting TrumpTheir woke credo of open carry, stare you down, keep what’s yours
“the coldness, rigidity, and calculation of an acquisitive spirit” (Elizabeth Hardwick)
As if tattooed on their noggins In dogged certainty, “Americans”
In our exclusionary patriotic certitude
Our identity proven by having given Trump a presidential term
A week in Quentin Massys’ Antwerp, waiting to sail to Jersey City as supercargo on the Finnish MS Wilke
A singular city
Antwerp’s painters alone, Rubens, van Cleve, Frans Hals, van Dyck, both Bruegels, and through the centuries the couple of hundred more
Jean Genet even lived there
Right back then into my early Sixties New York of agents and editors
A half dozen near misses, the interviews and rendezvous, perpetual hope and the tendered glad-handed promises
Even rewriting a novel, All of Us Were Born Here, for Braziller without a contract, a you’re-the-victim-and-we-all-know-it as the non-deal drifted away
With Braziller’s earnest attention but edgily too innocent-arrogant to perceive the unique implications and benefits of publishing a novel with them
Braziller top drawer then, not Doubleday or Simon & Schuster
My chance blown by me myself
Needing to travel and write
Not to stay put and self-promote
Assuredly not wanting to plot a career of living in New York trying to make it from a first novel
Or it might have been a gay nuanced situation for their editor who let it drop
The petty sexual hints and ploys that they took so seriously in publishing deals
With another eager writer in his twenties
Hot to go
Facing it
But falling away
Careers in letters
Fortunately, it was my assumptive terms not their balanced trade ones
And then Boston's always further than you think
Those were the years of a college friend giving themself a year to write poetry
They believed poetry could give them almost everything
“Education, then, is a sort of option, a curious settling down of the American half-serious utopian claim.” (Elizabeth Hardwick)
They would mimic Kerouac’s Washington Square sarcasms, “art-ers” and “interesteds,” Kerouac’s “piss and pulque” cool stance
But the clock was running
Last heard they was sliding carefully into a big university deanship
Bet they kept at it, mightily flashing phrases like “coarsely poetic,” “obviously significant rhyme scheme,” “underlying paradoxes”
People stay the same
Still this, still that“We know you can never do it properly — once and for all. Passion is never enough, neither is skill. But try.” (Toni Morrison)
The sublime of Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No 30 in E Major
Glenn Gould’s version as different from the usual and from Alicia de Larrocha’s as Broome is from Boston
Vehement philippic (Canto LXV)
“Before you leave here, sir, you’re going to learn that one of the most brutal things in the world is your average 19-year-old American boy” (a Marine sergeant to Philip Caputo, Vietnam 1965)
It used to be called civics, the middle or high school exposure to democratic government and constitutionality
Those who sat in the back would ridicule anything so organized, the that of it, balance of powers, the rights and duties
Those louts have taken over the red Republican zone are in charge and gearing up
They have caches of resentment and equipment
They have the bucks, novitiates and camp followers
They’re ready to go
“Days burning with glare” (Kinsella)
As with Lime :: Limón, apparent like twin colons, and functions, often, like an equal sign, allowing linguistic traffic to flow back and forth between apparently opposed, though weirdly interchangeable, states — lime and lemon
: : also bringing up the symbol used to bridge analogies in formal logic
We ponder dead cultures like zoo visitors chuckling at the so-like-us bonobos
And then glide off on ahead
Like the harsh chig-chig call of a red-bellied woodpecker in sun glare in a high white ash
Like the upbeat feeling of those at a well digger’s rig, put on blocks, three days of flush and pounding to forty gallons a minute water at seventy feet
As the supersede loud equipment backup beeping is to the new and emphatic dry ratcheting racket of big electric Amazon home delivery vans backing
Already well into the twenty-first’s third decade
It’s happening
We’re fired up
We’re stoked
We’re woke
D. E. Steward mainly writes months. Most of them are published, as is much of his short poetry. Five volumes of his months came out in 2018 as Chroma.