Read Letter Composed During a Lull in the Fighting Online
Authors: Kevin Powers
We had been looking for a sign and there it was:
the faded copper explaining that the iron of this place
was once known throughout
the South;
the nails, the pins, the wire; the things with which
to make machines; gleaming
instruments to single-row plow
the earth.
And past the sign: into the faint greased lubricant
smell of the foundry; into the crumbling
buildings,
where men once turned black from the smoke
that escaped the flues and made their bodies be
striped with soot
and sweat
as they smelted ingots, black and hot as the air
that rattled in their lungs
to give us
industry.
If, even past these remnants, we could see
the hill and the quarried stone where they perched
two cannons overlooking
the low river,
and the rocks, graffiti-covered and vast,
perhaps we truly would be told
that Michael still loves
Lou-Anne,
even if it was for only one night, with black
enamel spray paint in the heat
of a July evening
that they stroked and burned through
in '83.
I rank first among all things
the new pine board
 Â
my father and I nailed
into the half-collapsing dock
 Â
that lurched out back then
when I was young
 Â
into the brackish end of the Mattaponi.
I seem to recall something obvious
 Â
about the way that one board
was devoid of natural qualities, was
 Â
out of place and undeveloped in time, was
as yet unweathered as was I, the reverse
 Â
of which is mere endurance, an impotent
going on; so add it to the list
 Â
of things that I am not, if something must
be done with it:
 Â
not the prince of any
even minor island. Not
 Â
and won't be the hero of anybody's story
but my own, if that. Not
 Â
the ripple moving outward, not
the flat of the oar that slapped the water,
 Â
not the sound it made that drove
every bird from every branch at once, not
 Â
the sky they darkened with
their flight. Not
 Â
my memory of you still on that long
walk to the end of the dock,
 Â
jumping over every missing timber
as if it might make a bit of difference when
 Â
you spread out your arms and paused, then
finally fell into the water. Not
 Â
even briefly any father's son, not any
song we haven't heard before.
Look, out there
that goddamn lame horse
kicks up just the most recent of
the newly dusted snow,
 Â
which forms into a pattern,
a small ellipsis underneath
the lightning-split dogwood tree
you tried to mend
with wood glue, bandages,
and a spool of rusty bailing wire,
 Â
the end result of which
was nothing more than a dead tree
adorned with the trappings
of some god-awful human injury.
 Â
You are out back by the barn now,
hammering nails into
eighty dollars' worth of shoes
for that damn horse
you said we shouldn't kill,
 Â
and I tap my finger on the window,
and see myself mirrored in
the nails you drove already,
and in the manner of the impertinent roan
who ran in circles in the snow
this afternoon and made
the dirt turn up, who turned
the snow a little brown, the one
you always lectured me about
never trying to ride.
 Â
I remember when we had
no horse, no pasture
in which it could trample earth
into a name, or if not a name
something that would instigate
my thinking on the time
I said your name
 Â
over and over again
as if it might be made
into a kind of destiny,
a destiny of saying, and being
said, and by me, as if
a pale ellipsis could of its own accord
resist its being covered
by a lame horse turning up
the dirt a little more,
 Â
and so I write your name now
in the breath I've left against
the glass, the need for tapping
gone, the surprise long passed
from your saying in the night
not names but something else,
not destiny but,
Hell, if I was anywhere
but here I'd be just as much in love
with someone else,
 Â
and so I breathe again
and cover up
your name,
for I am not anywhere,
and I am not else.
We are born to be makers of crude tools.
And our speech is full of cruel
signifiers: you, me, them, us. I
am sure we will not survive.
 Â
No. I am only certain that the
pine trees that ring this lake in Virginia
are occasional, that I sit between them
at the water's edge,
 Â
cast two stones against
each other and rest.
For we go down
through these
terrible hours
together.
History isn't over, in spite of our desire
for it to be. Even now, one can see
the windfall of leaves gathering
like lost baggage on the dirty pathways
paralleling the old canal, itself resurrected
in an attempt to reproduce a minor economic miracle
that had taken place in a similarly middling city
halfway across this continent. I walked the route
with my father on the day of its opening,
before the new commercial ventures gained
brief fame and the shops and music halls,
the apartments in the husks of once burnt
tobacco warehouses collectively became
the place to be. He pointed out the sheer scale
of the endeavor, the countless men it took to dig
the channels, the drivers of the boats, the ingenuity
of fixing all the mechanisms in place without
the aid of welding. A scale model of the working locks
could be operated by inserting a penny in a slot.
Two doors shut, the lower chamber filled
with water, ostensibly bringing a ship
laden with goods to the level of the next
enclosure, where it could, by all accounts,
navigate the waters beyond the fall line
out even to Ohio, with luck, beyond
the Mississippi. I only later learned
the scale model of the locks I'd played with
was the only working set the river had ever known,
the actual project having run into financial troubles,
driven into the ground by every brand
of huckster and charlatan one could imagine,
not to mention the fact that the railroads
had already made ten thousand men's lifework
obsolete. And I wonder if I should be angry
that my father never mentioned this, that instead
of acknowledging the fact that this project had failed,
had been utterly doomed from the start, he'd made
a big production over the model boat that had gone
missing from the little plastic locks. What would he
have told me, as we sat carving newer, better boats
from peels of silver birch bark? What would he
have said as we watched the water raise them
and the doors to all that was beyond opened triumphantly
and we walked the three or four steps to the end
of the display, then started over? Anger
seems absurd, but so too does this effort
to recollect, to reconstruct a moment from my life
in miniature, knowing that a scale model can accomplish
nothing when the life-sized thing was never built,
knowing that everything in the world only reminds me
of something else. The last time I went
the whole lot of it had been abandoned, more or less.
A few bums hadn't gotten the message
that the civic venture was a failure, one or two
unremarkable concerts had occurred, a couple of yuppies
were still rumored to be living, all alone, in the penthouse
apartment of a renovated tobacco warehouse, there was
a stink about a parking lot that had been laid
over a slave burial ground. Nevertheless,
the sun was bright in the sky and the bums
dangled their fingertips in the canal's green water,
and apparently some landlord was still paying
to have the grass kept green and mowed.
My father had been buried not far
from there. No one sang at his wake.
The absence seemed improper, deep in misery or not,
like it was just as well for us to see song
buried with him. I passed the statue
of Christopher Newport as I left, as I had
that day with my father. I can't recall
feeling any different, though I probably did,
having learned in the intervening period that besides
being an accidental founder of this city, he was also
a pirate and a murderer of indigenous peoples.
If I'm honest, I don't think I cared.
If I'm honest, mine is the only history
that really interests me, which is unfortunate,
because I am not alone.
Watch how the drivers on the hill
make a blinking semaphore
of hazard lights, car horns and the idle
movement of their engines,
and pause beside the church
that gave the hill its name,
from which you once could see
the river and a city built
at a bend which reminded
some back then of another
on the Thames. So much
is made of likenesses.
 Â
Now a parade of candles held aloft are cupped
with a reverence for the melted wax
as the candles disappear to nubs.
There is an earnestness of being there
that I can't understand.
Â
Some say only vigils are alarming now;
each cause for grief becomes
a public play, improving on the passé
tragedy of dirt. If you undress
the earth right here, attempt
to excavate the hill, you will find
that every human wish
is buried there, underneath
the Georgian houses, under too
the veneer of asphalt
that hides a catalog of graves
the paraders somehow still recall,
perhaps with a sense
that there is imperfection
in anything that's made,
or that the alleged ghosts
are all that remain
of an abandoned field hospital,
where now there is a sketchy park
with a seesaw and a too-loose set
of monkey bars, where once
there was a pile of discarded limbs
stacked to the exact height at which
they could hold themselves aloft.
An entire train was later buried
underneath the hill. A tunnel,
poorly built, collapsed. At some point
everyone stopped trying
to dig the survivors out and went back
to whatever it was they'd done before,
despite the fact that witnesses attest
to having heard, for days after,
a muffled noise that seemed
to mimic human speech,
and later still, the quiet ringing
of the Pullman's bell.
Everything's exhausting.
No one should be blamed for this.
 Â
The parade is over anyway.
All that's left of whatever grief there was
is the splotchy wax of melted candles,
some plastic cups tossed into a gutter,
a line of cars disappearing into other
darknesses, the echo in the church
of the reenacted speech that Patrick Henry gave
making a nation out of violence.
If I remember right the church bell rang.
Everything was silent
to the west.
Every beginning is just a course correction,
the loosest string of the as yet untangled knot, the last
thought not yet lost and so worth playing out
as I wait for some new sadness to begin.
As in, down in the valley where I'm from there is
a parking lot, which covers up a grave,
a name we give in singular for the hundred slaves
they buried there back then. And I am unmoved by the cold
cardinality of this, and all the marks the waves
wore into the outer walls of factories
when the last flash flood that briefly threatened us
came through in '98. I stand beneath the interstate
as it rumbles overhead and disappears.
There were some names here once.
Some children, too. So what? Nothing
was counted. Order is a myth.
Four p.m., Late Empire, the historians will write,
the child on the banks of the James
creating a kingdom in his mind
first brings tyranny into the realm
at the end of a kite string, tugging
it this way and that, disinterestedly,
until the kite moving across the sky
becomes a symbol of abjection,
a disgrace, and is hated by the kingdom's
living god and only subject. In none
of the many volumes written in the boy king's honor
do they mention the ball of infant snakes
that startled him by drifting out from under
the log on which he stood, causing him
to let loose the string of the kite, but then again,
neither do they tell of the great fire that began
a hundred and fifty years before in a tobacco warehouse
across from where he stood and spread
to every corner of the city until the glow
of the remaining embers was seen
as an ominous beacon by the rebel lookouts on Spy Rock,
a point two hundred miles or more to the west
in the Appalachian Mountains. Shrug,
if you must; history is made of such omissions.
If we had paid more attention
we would not know more. If we were distracted
in the middle kingdom by a cloud
passing over the sun, obscuring
our view of the kite and the city skyline,
now rebuilt, as was the king in his regal isolation,
it would be understood as a natural failing,
one that would perhaps imbue our lives
with greater meaning, but it would not be true.
We would not know how the boy king,
years later, without heirs, would consider
his reign a failure, for how brief it was, an hour,
at best an afternoon, at worst the time it took
for that cloud to pass and dissipate, and he
would watch himself walk down the cobblestone streets,
the lamps forever gaslit, the footpaths of his life
as yet unweathered by the soles of his imagined subjects'
feet, nor by the pair of egrets who flapped their wings above
the river, nor by the long carp swimming out where it became
a brackish estuary, nor by the kite
flown off into the unverifiable distances.