shreveport poem: two
Let me tell you about the Louisiana heat then,
clinging to the skin like a dress two sizes too small
And everywhere trees and brush and wilderness
and all alive and real and home grown
In the air even
The smells of the life within it
Still the shit chains linking together in neat little rows
Anywhere, USA
But also,
Often
Vibrant old buildings built on old piles of brick
Painted and crumbling
Nondescript churches and their small, white steeples
By faith and by works to keep the floodwaters at bay
The brick building drive thrus
Mammoth daiquiris in their white styrofoam cups
In a variety of colorfully named flavors
(2 for $11 during happy hour, which seems every day all night,
and forever)
And they burn down with us in the backseat
where the base vibrates the loudest
Where you can see the music’s rhythms play out against the rearview mirror
They burn down with us on back lawns where the insects
Unyielding creatures,
Lay in wait
defending the earth this vast old marshland
Full as it was with our kind
All those gilded shades of brown and beige and black skin together, humming
Like a series of connecting vines;
Rooted.