IN THE WAKE OF HURRICANE HARVEY

Alive in Captivity after the Flood

There are lots of ways to be blind,

but you can smell water

even when you can’t read a map:

volcanic beachheads, a wild trench,

ambiguous lines of terrain,

each divided by the transitive property of water.

Admire the math of a cornfield maze,

the farmer who dusts his hands

in fulfillment while the silo leans forward

as if it has something to say.

Beyond it, tamed and peaceful,

a disused church stands, its eyes

broken like the last panes of heaven.

You’ve seen this, and through birthday binoculars

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you’ve seen other scapes: ructions at the waterhole

in a world so flat that everything seems in view —

hyenas, vultures, herds of elegant ungulates.

Home it’s all possumhaw and crawdad palace.

I like the land, animals, birds, this place;

still I wonder what it wants me to know.

So I listen when the water speaks;

I look when it tells me to,

but mostly I go when it says go.