Now You Care. Di Brandt
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NOW YOU CARE
NOW You Care
Di Brandt
Copyright © Di Brandt, 2003
First edition
This epub edition published in 2010. Electronic ISBN 978 1 77056 169 4.
Published with the assistance of the Canada Council for the Arts and the
Ontario Arts Council
NATIONAL LIBRARY OF CANADA CATALOGUING IN PUBLICATION
Brandt, Di
Now you care / Di Brandt.
Poems.
ISBN 1-55245-127-5
I. Title.
PS8553.R2953N69 2003 C811′.54 C2003-904402-5
for Walter
For the dawn, disgrace is the day to come; for the twilight the night which engulfs it. Formerly there were people of the dawn. Here we are, perhaps, at this hour of nightfall. But why crested like larks?
– René Char
ZONE
I was mixing stars and sand In front of him But he couldn't understand I was keeping the lightning of The thunder in my purse Just in front of him But he couldn't understand And I had been killed a thousand times Right at his feet But he hadn't understood
– Sarain Stump
Zone: <le Détroit>
after Stan Douglas
1
Breathing yellow air
here, at the heart of the dream
of the new world,
the bones of old horses and dead Indians
and lush virgin land, dripping with fruit
and the promise of wheat,
overlaid with glass and steel
and the dream of speed:
all these our bodies
crushed to appease
the 400 & 1 gods
of the Superhighway,
NAFTA, we worship you,
hallowed be your name,
here, where we are scattered
like dust or rain in ditches,
the ghosts of passenger pigeons
clouding the silver towered sky,
the future clogged in the arteries
of the potholed city,
Tecumseh, come back to us from your green grave, sing us your song of bravery on the lit bridge over the black river, splayed with grief over the loss of its ancient rainbow coloured fish swollen joy. Who shall be fisher king over this poisoned country, whose borders have become a mockery, blowing the world to bits with cars and cars and trucks and electricity and cars, who will cover our splintered bones with earth and blood, who will sing us back into –
2
See how there’s no one going to Windsor,
only everyone coming from?
Maybe they’ve been evacuated,
maybe there’s nuclear war,
maybe when we get there we’ll be the only ones.
See all those trucks coming toward us,
why else would there be rush hour on the 401
on a Thursday at nine o’clock in the evening?
I counted 200 trucks and 300 cars
and that’s just since London.
See that strange light in the sky over Detroit,
see how dark it is over Windsor?
You know how people keep disappearing,
you know all those babies born with deformities,
you know how organ thieves follow tourists
on the highway and grab them at night
on the motel turnoffs,
you know they’re staging those big highway accidents
to increase the number of organ donors?
My brother knew one of the guys paid to do it,
$100,000 for twenty bodies
but only if the livers are good.
See that car that’s been following us for the last hour,
see the pink glow of its headlights in the mirror?
That’s how you know.
Maybe we should turn around,
maybe we should duck so they can’t see us,
maybe it’s too late,
maybe we’re already dead,
maybe the war is over,
maybe we’re the only ones alive.
3
So there I am, sniffing around
the railroad tracks
in my usual quest for a bit of wildness,
weeds, something untinkered with,
goldenrod, purple aster, burdocks,
defiant against creosote,
my prairie blood surging
in recognition and fellow feeling,
and