Articles/Essays – Volume 17, No. 4
How Much for the Earth? A Suite of Poems: About Time for Considering
The peril of extinction brings us up against this reality,
this simple basic fact: Before there can be good or evil,
service or harm, lamenting or rejoicing, there must be life.[1]
About Considering
Consider is the word
the bishops used last fall
as counsel to their people concerning buildup
for a war by holocaust. Consider.
A not-bad word, considering.
It makes you grateful you exist and can—
consider, that is.
You pay attention, you notice.
You want to be worthy of considering, consideration.
That’s after all how you decide what hurts or makes you happy.
In this of all matters, it matters.
Given the idea, it is not a question of either words
or numbers, but something that will keep us humans
in business, the considering to which God bows,
to which theories of matter and mattering
come second if at all.
Relativity. I understand that’s where it started.
Einstein and his “energy equals mass times the speed of light
squared.”
To consider must be relative as well.
Relative to all I ever learned
in coming to this moment when speed of light
squares off against the speed of time.
And what I would consider
in this late season is: to calculate whether we peacemakers
shall inherit or destroy
this blessed earth.
Consideration I
In Biology I at East High
I first learned: Matter can neither be created
nor destroyed, only altered.
Mr. Garratt, all ravaged moustache and rimless glasses,
moved with buffalo shoulders, walked formaldehyde
among his vials and microscopes
intent on frogs’ vessels he could pluck with tweezers
to twang across the cognizance of fifteen-year-olds
tracing pulses for a grade
in the science of life.
Once, standing behind his high green counter in B-14
he lit a strip of litmus
in the blue gas flame of a Bunsen burner,
held its slim inches between his thumb and fingers,
watched the flame lick blue and yellow
till he had to drop it in a Petrie dish to finish.
From the fourth tier of pocked, armed desks,
my engines running, I watched the paper burn,
turn to ash, curl into itself
first black then grey
fine as the gossamer of remembering.
Not created. Not destroyed. Altered.
The arm of my desk like a Ouija board lifted
my hand expecting answers.
But only now the questions:
After the flames, where the turning
one way or another? Where the Phoenix?
The ascension?
Mr. Garratt, considering, I remember
ashes. Out of which nothing pours, rises, touches
freezes or floods.
Did what we learned mean anything?
Consideration II
In Salt Lake City, the morning of August 6th, 1945, the intersection
of First South and Main steamed under pedestrian traffic.
Street cars clanked out passengers from their middles,
took them up and in on flop-down steps in front.
A few cars cruised the block for angled parking
they would likely find in front of First Security,
Montgomery Ward, ZCML
At 10 A.M. on August 6th, 1945, I was walking east,
on break from my first full-time job, theoretically in advertising,
actually spraying fourteen hundred and
thirty-one colors on poster board
at Bennett Glass and Paint.
I walked past Dinwoodey’s,
through the aroma of coffee being ground
at Cooks a block away,
to the clock in front of Zion’s Bank.
Four newsboys
I could hear before I got there:
“Big Bomb Dropped on Japs!” “Extra, Extra! War Over Soon!”
“Extra, Extra! New Atom Bomb!” and “Extra, Extra Hiroshima Bombed!
Spells Peace!”
On the slant newsstand the fat paper.
Under the fat headlines, the fat mushroom cloud.
In the head of a twenty-year-old the wedding
of hope and destruction.
I was bound to believe.
Too full of youth and desperation
not to. At a corner, August shimmering hot and blue
for Utah, the not inconsiderable considerations:
My brother Homer home from the catapult
of his carrier in the Pacific. Guam
and Guadalcanal and Iwo Jima back to maps
and fiction
with sun instead of Stan and Clint
and Wilbur splashing on their shores.
Them back to filling tanks
and buying steaks and saddle shoes and sugar,
even nylon stockings for a girl—
all without a coupon.
Susan’s father, Margaret’s husband,
Grant, Parley, Jay—nobody else—ever!
listed in the paper Missing, Wounded,
Dead.
No more graveside flags and bugles.
Stuart out of prison camp,
back from the Philippines, home.
The bomb?
Like the sacking of Troy, something to survive forever
in remembering.
In that time so few things we needed to know. So
if the bomb ignited Nagasaki too?
In our steady attention to ceremony,
didn’t Admiral Halsey and the Missouri
plow into Tokyo Bay by the 14th?
Didn’t Hirohito and MacArthur sign us
into peace for all time?
Didn’t we sing “Happy Days are Here Again”?
Knowing what of gene mutations
for thirty generations and radioactivity
that could shift monsoons
and cool the earth?
Didn’t we go kissing and honking
in a giddy, waving hail
of filled up hallelujahs
down Main from First South
bumper to bumper all the way
to Liberty Park?
Like after any war, the celebrants.
The only thing created:
the power to destroy.
A finer ash
than litmus, Mr. Garratt.
A long long way past Troy.
Consideration III
In the 60s my freshman English classes stayed
at maybe thirty. Names came easy—in college
only surnames plus Mr., Miss, now and then a Mrs.
Polite and dignified the distance between rollbook
and desks. But like most affected distances
yielding to insistent 60s leaping of the gaps.
In English 2 the research paper
written partly from a Source Book so I the teacher
could substantiate the footnotes,
interpret the interpretations, grade
considerations.
Mr. Kerowski, behind Miss Dodd, right hand rear
of Orson Spencer 118 at 7:45, wore bib overalls,
toyed at his temple with blond frizz backed into a pony tail.
His French blue eyes took on John Hersey’s Hiroshima
like stil ponds with wooded edges,
reflecting, absorbing, giving back. Once he asked
in class, considering, “Mrs. Thayne, did you really see
the pictures then—the eyes?”
I knew he meant the unbelieving eyes
in that 60s source book.
And yes, I saw them
in the seeping faces
and tried then to remember if first
before or after Don next door came home,
his destroyer drydocked, and thirty-thousand like him
on the G. I. Bill come back to life in Utah
to sit in classrooms where Mr. Kerowski and inquisitor
Miss Dodd, brown eyed and abundant, now a quarter century
later sat, her asking, “So what would those few days
have meant? The war was over, American authorities—they
knew—not a week at most before surrender would have come—
and those people—hundreds of thousands
turned to pulp
in Hiroshima . . . “
All those quarters I told about December 7th—
what I remembered of the Day of Infamy
to justify, to justify: the flag, the Star Spangled Banner,
Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt
and us at seventeen packed into the Union Building Ballroom
listening to the declaration, wondering
what war was.
We who could not know that flame would
follow flame until the word for war was a word on fire,
in even our cloistered mountain deserts The Red Cross,
the USO, and men from Kearns in stiff boots
on their way overseas dancing meantime
on our floors and
in our dreams ashes to ashes
about to justify, to justify.
And Don and Scott and Rob and Homer—
of the thirty-thousand home, how many
would have died? I tried to keep on asking
and graded thirty, sixty, ninety research papers
some written so well I could tell
it happened again, again Hiroshima
that quarter and the next and next
not what the scientists and admirals and source book
brought to mind, but what my students saw,
what I remembered:
Torako Hironaka.
In her eyes a field of watermelons split,
a dead horse,
burned down power lines.
Her breasts torn,
Torako naked
walking in fragments of glass
crying “Aigo! Aigo!”
Her a vast sorrow
in the unforgettable fire
among other naked girls crying “Stupid America!”
My America.
My land of liberty and noble intention.
To whom I sang, sing.
And me grading papers
looking at myself
and fire and ashes
with eyes only starting to see.
Consideration IV
In the 50s we had five daughters.
They were one thing
growing up and dating boys who in the 70s
missed Viet Nam
but went away to summer camp
and made black jokes about the military.
But then they married. And I have seen
five grandsons and two baby girls
born in these eight years.
Each time it’s gone like this—
five months ago for Coulson Paul,
six weeks ago for Michael Abraham—
I in that delivery room in my greens
official photographer.
I never saw my children born,
but bringing in another generation
I saw it all:
The mother, our daughter, pushing, obedient.
The doctor deft, all rubber hands and arms.
The father and I watching in rapture, terror, awe:
The coming!
The breathless what is “it”?
Mottled scalp. Bluish head.
White face. Turkey neck. Chest
more narrow than the head. Arms
akimbo.
Frog belly still connected.
A boy! A blazing genital boy.
Lifeless.
Smooth clay, lavendar
under cottage cheese netting.
The cord a milksnake
snapped
clamped.
Syringe into mouth.
All of him dangling from the big gloved hands
re-arranging him.
Breahe, little boy! Breathe!
Then, the life!
His one-inch hand with bright pink nails
opening. His lower lip curling.
The tiny tongue pushing out.
His head back—Waa!
The chest rising,
knees coming up. Feet kicking. Arms
flailing.
A sniff of oxygen from a miniature mask.
Into a blanket.
Given to his father.
Taken to his mother.
Me forgetting to snap what I came for.
No. We all had what I came for:
The wanted baby. Alive and well.
No. More.
The pure gift.
Life.
God’s hand handing,
the voice saying, “Let there be life.” And
‘It is very good.”
Still in my greens
I went to make my call.
The walls sang, the doors and staircases
danced.
I tried to tell on the phone what had happened.
It came out, “He’s here. Seven ten. He’s just fine.
So is his mother.”
But in my car, my compact Fiesta Plum
I turned up E Street to high 1 lth Avenue.
I could see the mountains, the valley,
the city spangling on a hot July night.
On my stereo Anna Moffo sang the aria with flute
from Lucia.
“Birds,” I thought, “streams and wind songs in trees.
My whole life.”
Not a specific held in my head.
Only a giant rising and flowing
like the tears in that room,
that delivery room.
Delivery? Deliverance? Delivered?
I had been part of what makes clouds or the smell of rain
or the rhythm of sleeping and waking up. My skin
was the skin of the sky,
my traveling flight.
My arrival as ongoing as prayer.
Going home I would never be the same. I had been
home. Where else was there to go?
Now these weeks and months away from that astonishment
I think of babies
growing up to smile, touch,
run and sing and cry.
And one day to see their own be born.
And of the tons of dust and debris fused with
intensely radioactive fission products and sucked up
into the mushroom cloud, the mixture to return to earth
as radioactive fallout, most of it in the form of fine
ash, the sky and the earth altered.
11th Avenue gone
and no mountains
no radiant city
to exult with in the night.
Coulson Paul Rich or Michael Abraham Markosian
or maybe even Katie Ann Kilgore
ghosts?
Mustered to contend with
what is left by arsenals of armaments:
Ashes?
And I say No. For them for me, for all of us
with lots of places yet to go.
No. No thank you. No.
Consideration V
Thinking of her white hair never put in a bob
and her fingers lumped around needles
I called my Aunt Edna to say, “I’ve tried to reach you
to come for Sunday dinner.”
I could feel
her unhurrying smile up out of her hurrying.
She’s eighty-three. “If you ever want to reach me,”
she said, “call before seven or after eleven. I’m
with the Happy-Go-Luckies.”
I do now, knowing
she’s off somewhere other hours with the band,
the big harmonica band of the 10th East Senior Citizens’ Center.
Mostly they’re booked weeks ahead, at Christmas time months.
“How many are you?” I ask.
“Oh, maybe sixty
when we’re all together.” I can feel her beam.
‘Do you get any training to play?”
“Oh sure, our leader, Ab—
he’s really something. He tells you where to find the hole
and then you just blow draw blow.”
Blow draw blow? No valves? No mouth and tongue
and hands arranged for sharps or flats? The band I hear
is better than the old calliope at Liberty Park.
They can go wishful as a bow on a saw by a man in prison
or ragamuffin as a turkey trot on Halloween.
These old ones who have perfected their fears and celebrations.
They’ve had time. Like Aunt Edna gathering eggs,
throwing balls at Morgan County fairs, run off at seventeen
to marry, stand on cement floors to sell men’s lapels,
this year’s wide, next year’s narrow in ZC’s budget store,
ride the bus at eight and six without vexation
to fix the meals and bottle the fruit
and plant the chrysanthemums for five children
and a husband “predisposed to drink.”
Until the children married,
he died, and she retired at seventy
to her unlonely music and the shawls
crocheted for over sixty babies
in a solitude cramming her lifetime together
where a thousand hands could not accommodate
her generous resolve to get on with life. She continues,
Aunt Edna.
The continuers.
I used to have a string of them to play across by screen
in the night when my own visions ran pale: Mother, Father,
twelve uncles and my varigated aunts, even grandmas
and their slow syllables on my unlighted spaces.
I could count on them to speak a language I never
could not understand: To tell me how.
Now, them forced
one at a time from the screen, only Aunt Edna remains
to say, to show or tell me where she already is,
has come from. And she, my only history now
about to become another missing face.
I want her at my table.
Through her I can walk past myself
and remember what is yet to come. But at that table
mostly I am older than the rest. The house has thickened.
My husband and I, brothers, sisters, friends
startle ourselves with lingering past the childhood
that no longer includes us. We have grown huge with our following
as our clusters of kin and contemporaries thin out
till everywhere now is a dead and a living place.
We will find each other next in a dream,
our boundaries having moved with us,
no one left to look to but ourselves. So little time
for the looking to each other.
In the quiet, in my clumps of thought
I am joined now by your music, Aunt Edna.
I lie in bed and spread the light of it
with my fingers on the wall
where the shapes slide and become a calligraphy,
the signs of a language we speak only in shadows.
It says, Consider: Coming to know how to blowdrawblow
is right. Knowing how
before you die to grow so keenly old must be the answer:
There in your late music.
Experts tell us that in the thermal pulse two miles across
any human beings would be reduced to smoke and ashes.
They would simply disappear. Babies, old folks,
us in between the same.
With no history left to rely on
or music to pass along.
Or a word to say I loved you all . . .
But not enough
to end the race to stockpile devastation
before it ended us.
What fear compels us more than what we love?
What does it matter what we know?
Where might be the courage to blow draw blow?
Consideration VI
The man at Dachau
didn’t know of course that I was watching him,
me for my first time in Europe that August of 1982
sprung giddy from the Jungfrau, Lake Geneva
Eurail, pension, a bus of swaying shoulders
through Munich to Dachau.
This we thought would be a place to look at fear
and how to overcome it. But in the museum a single film
had been enough for me: Ignited eyes, boned corpses.
I chose to wait, solitary, on cement steps to an old entry
while my family went to tour the ovens.
Despairing in that stark enclosure, I thought,
“Is this how we grope our way past the terrors,
of this century? By coming to this place of gloom?
Here where life is written off before it has begun?”
But thirty feet away a man my age stood in the vast
square of gravel and took over my personal history.
He and I were alone in that place that is a place,
me on my steps in my Levi skirt and running shoes,
him in his light blue suit and shirt and tie,
even his hair like women dipped in bluing,
his DeGaulle profile an imprint
on the rain-heavy sky. He leaned up from a strand
of mahogany cane, alert
as if in one of those childhood games
played only after dark, everyone frightened
of being found.
He stared across the desolate parade ground.
His gaze, like memory pulled across a rasp, riveted
on the blue plaster barracks and the one door, a blue door,
as if it had scent and vibration across the distance
to his face and was waving him back through history.
He watched the door, I watched him, both of us
at eye level with that dead and living picture:
Behind him an L of grass. Beyond it the black metal sculpture:
Bodies, fingers, knees—going up in smoke. Out of sight
a child wailing MaMaaaa. A far rim of trees, not one
old.
Their leaves of course contained in them instructions to fall.
They would whirl unamazed into the next season. Others would
be back green, new growth no more than
the changing of skins.
But the seasons that had turned that man and me
grey had not prepared us for letting go.
I felt what it was like to be part of a space not mine,
to shiver at wanting something to hold to
and having only shards even to grasp for. He became all I had,
the present, a presence: He will always be here.
He stares without motion, involved as a lover
awaiting a lover in a crowd. Like a camera his gaze inches
from end to end of the barracks, returns, returns
to the door. It is more than a memorial he is attending.
The building keeps everything; it remembers.
He listens to its voices with a look of such sadness
I want to touch it away. Who might have known I could be
so held by what passes between a stranger and the years,
him searching for a day and finding it?
From his blue door, what corpses thrown out,
limbs so smooth they might have been alive?
Civilian? Soldier? Captive? Was he one who with calipers
extracted teeth and ran? Where might those legs have been?
And how did they perform in Dachau?
It is happening again in the blue of his eyes
on that blue door.
Eyes still on the door, he turns, tries to vanish
as a person would having seen it all.
But his body speaks.
Its faithless legs become flippers.
They do not walk, they go toe first,
calf extended, toe, heel, hinges sprung
to flop ahead past the ballast of the flimsy cane,
toe after toe dragging in gravel,
a masterpiece of regret, holy and helpless.
Retreating, he halts at a three-inch step.
He reaches hand to knee
pulls each leg up, over.
Eyes still on the door
in a day that revolves too close around us both,
he pulls himself erect. Contained, as if wound
he starts up again, loses his saving shape,
plummets
like a timber to the iron fence,
his cane a small crash.
His hands, free and ready
as if part of an act no one wanted to see,
catch the skeleton that hauls itself together,
straightens,
and like a movie of destruction playing backwards
flop flop flip flops,
a blue stick figure off and gone from everything
but the camera in my grey head.
It’s five o’clock. The parade ground
is almost empty. My family are still somewhere
maybe underground, touring.
And if they were never to come back? Who would I be?
I who thought I was the sort of girl to leave a page
because one hand held another,
or could skim or skip some altogether.
But not so. The six million
talk to me without their crypts and ashes.
Like my man in blue they have teeth to brush
and loves to find
and blue doors needing to be looked into.
Now here they come, the alive ones,
my four dears back from the furnaces
walking from behind the sign MUSEUM.
Under it the large outstanding script
in four languages: NEVER AGAIN.
Suppose the ovens were thermal nuclear?
Out of them clouds of dust
and mushroom clouds spreading over
anywhere we were, coming together
to form vast camopies, to turn day into night.
Fires would spring up in Munich
and Mt. Air Canyon—
in every forest dry enough to burn,
in the seeping rubbish of Salt Lake City
and Sanpete County. And in San Francisco,
Bangkok
Florence
Bombay
Kiev
and Chad, Nigeria.
The world would simply go from boom to fire to ash.
Evacuation? Shelters?
No way.
No hole big enough
to hide or bury
all of us or nature in.
And no one left
to consider: Even extermination
was not extinction.
More than NEVER AGAIN —
NEVER!
Not even now the last consideration —
the bleak obscenity
of racing to out race each other
to the end.
Considering—The End
So finally I consider only life: The holocaust ahead
would leave no one behind
to question how we happened not to happen
in any moment but our tragic own.
I have only one voice, one language,
one set of memories to look back on,
a thousand impulses to look ahead
if I will
if there is time
to consider:
How much for the earth?
what would I keep?
Blue mountains against a black sky,
Smiles exchanged so well we do not know our ages or conditions.
Snow melted, leaves moving again,
In a voice, rain finding its way to the stream.
Heat rising like wands from the desert,
A could drink, the touch of hair enough all by itself.
First apricot pickle sharp, a phone ringing on time,
Lights going on, wanting them off for the dark.
A song flooded with memory, smell of pinon in fire, onion in stew,
A dancer watched like a child, a child in flight like a dancer.
Hot soup, hot bath, hot air to take to the canyon,
Aging slowly from the bones outward, time to pick and choose.
A wooden spoon, the white whisper of a needle in cloth,
Laughing like tossed water, skis on snow.
Smell of soap, hot animal. An apple, crisp. A ball hit,
Tongue of a lover, dream of a dead mother stroking our cheek.
An idea, the Pieta, the Hand of God, a word, a prayer,
The word, the earth far from without form and void.
The earth created and not destroyed. If altered,
not back to darkness upon the face of the deep.
You, me, combinations of color and sound,
The spirit of God moving upon the waters.
A child born, an aunt with reason to blow draw blow,
A celebration for the end of war. A new generation inevitable.
The coming of sun because it is good.
A world alive for a blue door to open onto.
A candle, a kiss, eyes meeting. Holding.
Life—to consider.
Then no more considering, hypothesizing, tolerating.
No litmus-paper ending in a cosmic Petrie dish.
No more silence.
For the earth?
For the life in me, in you,
I say Yes. Yes thank you, Yes.
In your breath fused with mine
Even ashes stir and glow.
It’s time. It’s time we said together
Yes to life. To ashes, simply No.
[1] [Editor’s Note: This footnote was an asterisk in the printed version] Jonathan Schell, The Fate of the Earth, Avon, N.Y., N.Y., 1982.