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Stage Design—American Drama

Stage Design/American Drama

 

 

Down front on America’s stage—

awash in a universe

of light arranged by

the ultimate technician.

Come closer.  Anticipate

spectacle.

 

First sun-splash

on these shores fashions

fool’s gold of surf that heaves against

foam-smoothed, lobster black,

slick rock beaches of northern Maine/

bubbles about black rubber boots of men in boats—

another day, another dime,

shivered away in ancient rime—

adrift in fog on the black

glass

harbor

surface.

 

Grand Canyon sunrise

EXPLODES

copper and white/

orange and green/

blood red/

over many thousand pounds

of brash brown

dirt—

in every direction/especially down.

Soldierly shadows armed with swords

of slivered sunlight hack through scrub

like so much meat, to each day’s final

battle at the canyon’s rim/

while a mile below the torment

called the Colorado

turns silver and gold,

black, blue, and

thundering

mud.

 

Louisiana bayous trickle chlorophyll caramel over twisted hickory sentinels, monumental elms and sycamores—even the alligators.  More mystery here than far-flung nebulae—and everything fighting back ***** green kudzu.

 

The Badlands of South Dakota, striped like the surface of a ***** peppermint planet—sizzling in the sun, bone cold in the shade—knobby tan canyons wrapped in ribbons of rust that dribble sounds one can neither recall nor reproduce.

 

Same phenomenon frames dawn over spongy folds of tall green cilia ocean called simply The Plains.

Kansas, Nebraska, horizons so far away thunderstorms creep along like dark, threatening slugs.

Distant night fireworks laden with punishing hail hide tornadoes and winged farmhouses in the horizontal gloom.  In the morning—those sounds again.  Critters? Wind. Ghosts, maybe.

 

Spectral mists of the Great Northwest cloak clear-cut sores on Nature’s sacred,

fragrant, deep green shores, falling steep to the creamy Pacific.

Light's a plaything here. Big Sur

renders color to gem, sparkles

down the coast

to rusty Golden Gate and grimy LA,

where the sun goes down brown

and the rain shines

like gun metal.

 

Georgia soil—

homicidal redheaded cousin running loose, looking for trouble—

grows swampy hardwood groves/

leaves hung limp from humidity/

masking antebellum secrets/

offering sanctuary to voodoo practitioners and moonshiners alike.

Magic, danger, ****** and ghosts

of slaughtered slaves wander tight-packed old-growth forests.

Some say the soil is red from ancient conflict,

unanswered pleas for mercy drowned

in the drenching rains

of hurricanes

strayed north from the Gulf of Mexico.

Others claim tears of countless mothers will never leave

Civil War blood completely dry.

 

Northern New England foliage--

master maples drunk on fresh cider/

psychedelic finger-paint exhibitionists high on

the year’s last harvest,

intoxicated by Nature’s largess/

symphonies of scarlet, tangerine, lemon, even purple--

regal birds migrate over lakes so blue

you could chip your teeth on them,

and a diehard hemlock conducts its final green opus to a sea of primary colors.

 

Iowa is quiet and corn, obscuring whole towns and the lives held captive therein.  All the green on Earth is planted here; all the sun, all the sapphire sky feeding knee-high-by-July crops, bleaching spare white churches, white picket fences, white-on-white generations and all their vanilla dreams.

 

Linger beneath Montana’s cobalt crystal canopy to know why it’s called Big Sky.

Stark, Crazy Mountains chase stuttering clouds above treeless, tumbleweed towns,

bathed in the same blues as Wyoming, blown through a wild man’s horn.

 

A wink of sunlight

mirrored in unseen peaks

perhaps hundreds of miles away—

snow so white/Rocky Mountains so hard and gray—

behind a universe of wheat flatness beckoning the eye to infinity, slowly,

slowly, the Continental Divide rises

from the horizon like a monster parade balloon filling with gas on another continent.

The Flat Irons--majestic stone slabs lounging against Boulder's nearby foothills--

were cursed by ancient observers.

One peek at their precarious slopes compels you to return.

Been back three times and I’m still not sure I believe it.

 

Southwestern deserts’ blaze,

haze, and halo—spotlights hot,

focused on towering sandstone totems.

Deep gashes of flowering canyon, adrift in the flat and barren,

rage water, mud, and death during summer storms.

Scrub and sand, dust and desolation, land unfit for demons.

Get thee behind me, Arizona.

 

Endless, straight, lonely two-lanes

carve the lunar landscape of west Texas

into parcels of wasteland, miles marked by

bleached carcasses of ranch animals

and their predators, some hung

on fences as a warning

that people really do

live there.

 

Cities have their place,

their places,

their placement--

but my heart can’t pound to the beat of traffic

like it does to waterfall spray.

 

Turn your back to the fire in sufficient twilight and a mountain range sharpens into a line—

coyotes prowling, howling on the perimeter.

To spy on a wild animal lost in thought.

The sight--and sound--as swans alight or leave a hidden pond.

Northern lights and swamp gas,

everywhere the stench

of Earth.

 

This

is what matters—

all around us—

this alone.

 

Not politics,

not religion,

not countries.

 

Just this—

stage.

Request permission to use this poem
a
Written by
auntie-hosebag
American
Published
Nov 17, 2010
Lines·Words
127·805
Notes

This is about the fifteenth iteration of this piece.  It keeps shifting from prose to poem and back again--or worse.  I lost control of it long ago.  Please help me rein this ***** in.  Workshop?

Permission

Request to use this poem

Tell auntie-hosebag how you would like to use it. We review requests before forwarding them.

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