Friday, December 10, 2021

In the Meantime

'Poem for the week' -- "In the Meantime":

The river rose wildly every seventh spring

or so, and down the hatch went the town,

just a floating hat box or two, a cradle,

a cellar door like an ark to float us back

into the story of how we drown but never

for good, or long. How the ornate numbers 

of the bank clock filled with flood, how 

we scraped minute by minute the mud 

from the hours and days until the gears

of time started to catch and count again.

Calamity is how the story goes, how

we built the books of the Bible. Not 

the one for church, but the one the gods

of weather inscribed into our shoulder

blades and jawbones to grant them grit

enough to work the dumb flour of day

into bread and breath again. The world

has a habit of ending, every grandmother 

and father knew well enough never to say,

so deeply was it stained into the brick 

and mind. We live in the meantime

is how I remember the length of twilight 

and late summer cicadas grinding the air

into what seemed like unholy racket to us, 

but for them was the world’s only music.

-- Max Garland


From the author:

“My grandparents loved to remember the drowning of our western Kentucky town in the 1937 Ohio River flood. I inherited the newspaper images—a Jersey cow on a second story balcony, people rowing down Broadway. That flood became intermingled with the one I learned about in church, Noah’s flood. In fact, history and childhood religion more or less flowed together in an ongoing story of Calamity and Grit. But honestly, I probably wrote the poem because I liked the sound of the words ‘the river rose wildly’ and wanted to keep that sound going as long as I could.”