Poetry
Six
These poems were written in response to a documentary photo project by Rachel Sussman called The Oldest Living Things in The World. Since 2004, Sussman has traversed the globe, photographing continuously living organisms more than 2,000 years old.
STROMATOLITES
Arms splayed wide as if to grasp
each other’s hands, if never quite
to touch, a large extended family
of gingerbread men lies face down
in shallow water, apparently drowned.
The sky is clear and oh so blue,
a gorgeous day in Western Australia,
not atypical either. I remember
wandering the streets of Sydney
(in the east), everything out of whack,
time most of all. My internal clock
read eight p.m. yet the sunlight shone
at noon the following day. Nevertheless
the gingerbread men of western OZ
are very much alive. Two thousand-plus
years old, these layered biochemical
accretionary structures form
in shallow water as biofilms trap,
bind, and cement sedimentary grains
of microorganisms. The name combines
stroma and lithos, “mattress” and “stone.”
I picture the man who named them
standing, Whitmanic and alone
above this bay of sleep, wondering
to himself or possibly aloud
if the line between life and death
isn’t so very clear, if it even exists,
thinking too it might be time
to catch a nap before setting himself
to the tasks he’s planned for the afternoon.
LA LLARETA
These densely packed buds
on long, thin stems cling
to each other with such ferocity
that what we see resembles not
so much a flower as The Blob,
that mysterious organism
deposited by meteor to earth,
which feeds and grows voraciously
on human flesh, its only weakness
the cold, a fact discovered
by a young Steve McQueen,
who escapes the fate of so many
in Anytown, USA
when he hides from the monster
in a walk-in restaurant cooler,
but the Llareta plant of Chile,
(or the Atacama Desert, to be
exact, a place compared often
to Mars or the moon) despite
its otherworldly appearance,
bears humankind no malice,
its bulbous muscularity,
though it may appear alien
to the outsider, is at home
here in the high mountain sand,
providing fuel to the fires
of rangers and nomads
it warms them from the chill
nighttime winds that blow
out of who-knows-where,
some even use them as chairs
or platforms to stand upon
perhaps to get a better view,
perhaps to test their strength,
amazed that a million flowers
can over time grow so close
they shed their tender selves
to form a collective bond
that reverses the passage of time
making them stronger
as everything around them
starts to rot they grow firm
in their resolve to outlast
every living thing in sight.
ANTARCTIC MOSS
As we pick over the bones
of long dead whales, ocean’s
dried detritus, dense white clouds
descend upon the mountain
like a judgment, smothering
its peak, its wide brown flanks,
leaving visible only a thin belt
of soft green moss tensed
around its waist. Is it the subtle
daily encroachments of the sea
that frighten them? Fear of
invisibility? Of being
swallowed and blinded by
the cloud? Surely it isn’t
leviathan, whose bleached
and broken bones, having
rendered up their colors as
supplication and ornament,
are little more than provender.
It must be something else,
something not in the frame
yet framing it, the threat
of an ending, the possibility
of which has just begun
to be revealed, but hasn’t yet
a proper name.
BRISTLECONE PINE
Some poems grow slowly,
one line at a time,
one word at a time,
one silence. Certain climes
or altitudes lack
the readers necessary
for steady growth,
causing poems to conserve
energy by shutting down.
Indeed, some poems grow
at a remarkably slow rate,
one letter per century,
say, and can survive
with few if any readers
for up to 5,000 years.
One cannot surmise
their age by size alone.
Many express themselves
in short lines or tiny fonts
whose efficient use
of space makes growth
nearly imperceptible.
Evidence of longevity
is often buried deep inside,
rendering most scientific
dating methods moot. Yet,
despite the mystery
of their provenance,
despite the fact that by all
outward signs these poems
are but fossilized remains,
it is not unheard of,
in the rarefied zones
these organisms inhabit,
to discover a family of rhymes
not merely surviving
but thriving. One has to marvel
at their ability to adapt
to a habitat in which so few
readers even know they exist,
fewer still even care.
PANDO
Thick, black horizontal scars
and prominent black knots
mark the smooth, white skin
of the populus tremuloides.
Not a tree but a clone, it spreads,
just as the name of this grove,
the literal translation of which
“I spread,” suggests a unitary mind
diffusing rhizomatically (“a rhizome
has no beginning or end”). Pushing
itself sideways and down, it holds
its place without ever standing still,
sends scouts outward in the form
of green shoots that rise quickly.
The fibers shred and expand, gaining
strength in proportion to the damage
(“the fabric of the rhizome
is the conjunction, and....and....and....”).
These scars are the residue of ascent,
I speculate (for every tree needs a myth!).
Having multiplied into an army of giants,
it sends feelers in all directions,
antennae taking measure of the light,
the vibrations of the breeze.
Sound waves crossing the universe
cause the leaves to quake, quietly
at first, then louder, in unison,
a million chattering castanets
turn yellow from green
before falling to the ground,
one, two, three thousand at once,
then nothing, the passage of time,
eighty-thousand-maybe-a-million years
(“variation, expansion, conquest,
capture, offshoots.”).
OLD TJIKKO
It appears from this angle
and distance little more
than a ragged stick, rising
weakly, staggering over
a moonscape of stone,
at a glance no different
from the broken pines
beside our house
which lost their tops
in superstorms and such.
The caption reads:
Spruce Gran Picea #0909-11A07
(9,550 years old; Sweden).
Thus, this teetering trunk
(a stunted shrub
for most of its life, they say
it came to resemble a tree
only with the advent
of Global Warming)
had stood its ground, silent
and mostly ignored
as empire after empire
burst into flames, until,
that is, a geologist,
serendipitously named Leif,
used carbon dating
to discover its age
before he christened it
with the appellation
of his late beloved dog.