FLOOD
Yesterday, my mother
drove me to see
a buffalo herd beyond
an electrified fence.
Once hundreds of thousands
of their ancestors
roamed over the prairies
of the Arkansas River.
Now thanks to new breeding
those rough hairy beasts
can roll in the mud
from the recent downpour.
We had to go over
the river to get there.
It was swollen and swift,
and its slate-gray rush
had covered square miles
of cinnamon, dove land,
and silted living rooms
of white farm houses,
and submerged the fields
of new com and wheat stubble
with glistening lakes
like huge guitar picks.
As a kid in the house
I grew up in, for several
springs it flooded the two
rivers we lived between.
I remember all night
hauling gunny sacks
and filling sand bags,
and building a back-heavy wall,
but still it poured through
and canoers came by
and the water rolled in
to the door across the street.
As an adult in Western
Kansas, I knew a man
whose job it was, because
Colorado had dammed the Arkansas,
to measure the depth
of a river that often
was just a depression
in a working wheat field.
He touched a chord
that kept me at a distance
from any false order
that I might support.
Now I'm watching the reflection
of the sun on the Walnut.
A polyphony of ripples
washes over the flow
or eroding sand channels.
It moistens my lips.
It roars and cools my lungs.
I respond to particular
sound improvisations.
I live on the edge
of a river whose urge
is to stay alive.
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