The Great Falls, was a massive clone of ice; yet still her waters poured forth in roaring waves over the ebb of the river.
Sliding into a frozen crevasse, down an icy bar, I land wet, chilled and numb from the duration of the decent and the soul piercing cold.
On the landing, the carcasses of industrial waste were encased in a frozen loam.
The giant mill wheel locked in place, entombed in a glacier of ice.
It made good sense to found this city on an industrious bluff.
The Great Falls spun the wheels that powered vast manufactures.
Shoots and trams shot flumes of water down every street.
Everyman was a master of his cottage industry, forging bullets constructing locomotives, spinning the finest silk from the most exotic foreign worms.
But the machines shut down.
The handiwork of learned men, entrepreneurs, urban planners, engineers and artisans now encased in frozen rust.
Barely a tool could be used to produce a product or plumb a line.
A simple hand tool could not be lifted without betraying its purpose.
A society of useful manufactures frozen shut; dissolving into bankrupt liquidation; so I left my home on Chianci Street and caught the first Paterson Plank coach to the Hoboken Ferry.
I would be in Manhattoes by nightfall.
The morning travels consumed thoughts of future prospects.
The silk mill forever closed.
The industry of my home city, dead.
This weaver of fine silk had lost his loom.
For William Carlos Williams From: Vesuvia, 1997
Music Selection: Yo-Yo Ma & Silk Road Ensemble, Arabian Waltz