Backyard TrinityBut beyond the river, the steady droning of the interstate sooner or later invaded my consciousness with its call. There are so few places that are not polluted with noise these days. At least the train only interrupts twice a day with its rumbling earthquakes. The pure quiet of that Acadia day 2 ½ months ago was one holy exception. (Revisions will be posted here.)
Behind their duplex there’s a pair
of train tracks drawn between the dots
of Portland Maine and Boston Mass,
connected twice a day by yachts
of steel through drafts of diesel fuel
sailing their passengers in dual
directions. But behind the tracks
a little river flows with almost no
objective but meandering.
Its hue is more pistachio
than blue and on its surface floats
a white canoe. No other boats
are visible. Beyond that stream
the task force of an interstate
pulsates with loud omnipresent
reverberations from the great
all-knowing Oz, not Kansas-bound
this time, so somewhat more unsound.
Gregory Perry 2004
Note: revision posted here now 14 hours later.
2 comments:
AWESOME! LOVE THIS!
Yeah, this is good.
I actually like the sound of trains - of which I hear pleanty, with the main Philly-Pittsburgh line circling the mountain I live on. Unfortunately, the Wizard (our former congressman Bud Shuster, who also blessed Boston with the Big Dig) had an interstate built, too, and it's right over the ridge to the west of me. Thta means that quite often on the nicest days, with a breeze out of the west, I have to put up with the roar of traffic. It sucks. I say, bring back the trains!
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