Anodyne
I
Just north of Ward, South Carolina,
the pong of the paper mill writhes
the air southward,
across the orchards, all the way
to Johnston,
where creeks coil
through their motions;
small seeps carry through ditches
to and from my father’s pond,
where catfish ripple
across the bottom, stir up
delicate skeletons
of their forebears. A stray dog,
wolflike, with a snout long and fierce,
with a lip piece bitten and torn
from the bone so the teeth
forever snarl through that terrified life,
wails the tree line to prayer.
Up toward McCormick, a fire gnaws
through understory, destroys, renews.
The ash crosses
four counties.
II
When I rise in the lonely hours
of the predawn, and the violet blossom
of fear turns in my stomach,
I hear my grandfather’s voice.
I smell the cedar tang of his small house
in Troutman, North Carolina.
He told me once that, while fighting
in Iwo Jima, down deep in a trench canopied
in gunfire and the screams of the dying,
he saw a Japanese man’s face
detach from the front of his skull
and fall like a huge, soggy leaf
down the hole to land on his shoulder,
the eyebrows and mouth still intact,
a grisly mask.
Later, on Honshu, a crazed boy
from Idaho threatened
to slit his throat
if he didn’t let the boy piss first in a bunker.
So my grandfather let him pass,
walked a few steps back,
and turned to see the boy explode
on a mine, a shard of metal
flying out of the jet of viscera
to lodge deep in his arm.
III
When I am angry, envy
grinding my body
down to burl,
I think of the sweat drenching
my grandfather’s face, searing his eyes,
as he tried to rest
in the cover of scant trees
while shells boomed just a mile
downriver.
Then the rage shrinks in me,
and I notice how the wind sends
the high branches
to song. I notice how the trees scroll
through words of their own hidden language,
a lexicon behind perception,
a grammar of silences
that belies the violence
pulsing through our kind.
IV
Down here in Johnston,
just east of the Savannah,
the iron-red snake that winds
between Georgia and Carolina, peaches
amplify under skies thrummed with bees,
attuned to field, bough, flower—
sometimes frost-silenced,
sometimes urged
to sweetness, the fruit
swollen wombs. Sometimes
the tongue cannot rejoice;
sometimes the psalms
of August shrivel
the heart to knot. So down
here, when summers growl
and scald creek-mouths
dry, hiss afternoons
with sudden storms, I watch
the woods and water for least gestures,
pray to know the singing
of the fox or kingfisher, elm or bream,
so that nights
when I can’t sleep—deprived
of the one voice
I long to hear—
I can ride out those creatures’
compound melodies,
their one and only hymn.