Poetry & Democracy
In Line to Vote on Our Future Climate
In Line to Vote on Our Future Climate
Years from now—
after the ice caps
& the asteroid;
after the stars have died
& we receive word
of their passing,
but before the melting
point has sung
some lullaby
of mercury always tugging
closer that sun
we did not know
to fear; after the heat
has become so rote
we cannot recreate
much less recollect
the feeling of cool
or of breeze & even
stones quit carrying
any memory of chill—
I will think of your
body cracked open
at the center
like the surface
of the Susquehanna
in deep December,
the cool field
of your thigh against
my cheek, the creek
of me sprung cold
from sleep. I will keep
for myself
the moment
before all this: the sand
& the wasteland
it made of us—
the day we woke & green
in all its iterations
had abandoned us
& with it the earth—after
the famine but before
the drought, when
you fed my wet breath
into the hot terrarium
of you still chilled
at the edges by less natural
disasters. Like
the neighbor boy
who told you where
in the snow you should
put your bare hand
& for how long you should
leave it. How it was
returned to you still
fixed to your arm
but so cold it
nearly boiled,
so blue it was ablaze.