Poem Featuring an Apocalypse
Rebecca Aronson | Poetry
Imagine snow, that clean
tamping down that mutes color
and makes an art of moonlight. The end
of the world begins with a terrible noise,
the breaking down
of mechanisms and order, of protocol
and hierarchies. Sirens
and skirmishes, the cracking of glass and
below it all like a baseline,
weeping.
Then the kind of quiet
you find now only in graveyards or the woods,
snow-filled, low-lit, eerie; a hush
as layered as puff pastry. Snow
making indistinct mounds
of refuse. Our abandoned laptops
and useless phones. Cars
empty of fuel but piled full
of overstuffed backpacks, the bodies
of bicycles and shopping carts
broken and rusting. After snow
comes regrowth.
A disgusting process, so much
to break down, to overcome, to be made
use of. Revision
is always messy. All the parts scattered
like unattached limbs, like the tiny, hard organs
from the game of Operation thrown down
on a table, corresponding to nothing
recognizable. What is needed
is time. The seconds collecting like snow flakes,
piling up, untouched now by anything
that is not scavenging, that is not wind.
Rebecca Aronson is the author of three books of poetry: Anchor, Ghost Child of the Atalanta Bloom, and Creature, Creature. She has been a recipient of a Prairie Schooner Strousse Award, the Loft’s Speakeasy Poetry Prize, and a Tennessee Williams Scholarship to Sewanee. She has work appearing recently or soon in The Taos Journal of Poetry, In the Tempered Dark: Contemporary Poets Transcending Elegy, Crosswinds, The Laurel Review, and others. She is co-founder and host of Bad Mouth, a series of words and music. She lives in Albuquerque with her husband, teenage son, and a very demanding cat. She teaches writing at Central New Mexico CC.
Featured Image by jonathan ocampo