Early Occult Memory Systems of the Lower Midwest

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In his fifth year the son, deep in the backseat 
of his father’s Ford and the mysterium
of time, holds time in memory with words,
night, this night, on the way to a stalled rig south 
of Kiowa Creek where the plains wind stacks 
the skeletons of weeds on barbed-wire fences 
and rattles the battered DeKalb sign to make 
the child think of time in its passing, of death.

Cattle stare at flat-bed haulers gunning clumps 
of black smoke and lugging damaged drill pipe 
up the gullied, mud-hollowed road. Road, this 
road. Roustabouts shouting from the crow’s nest 
float like Ascension angels on a ring of lights. 
Chokecherries gouge the purpled sky, cloud-
swags running the moon under, and starlight 
rains across the Ford’s blue hood. Blue, this blue.

Later, where black flies haunt the mud tank, 
the boy walks along the pipe rack dragging
a stick across the hollow ends to make a kind 
of music, and the creek throbs with frog songs, 
locusts, the rasp of tree limbs blown and scattered. 
The great horse people, his father, these sounds, 
these shapes saved from time’s dark creek as the car 
moves across the moving earth: world, this world.

© Boris Pasternak