By Robert Bové web posted March 24, 2003 Compass (See Compass at National Review Online for first published version. A more recent version is at The Wall Street Journal Online.) We marked four winds by an acrid smoke, Smoke first black, then white, Driven across East River and New York Harbor, Carried east across Brooklyn Heights, then south over Staten Island, Out over the Narrows, down Jersey Shore, then up Long Island and out to sea, Carried north over Central Park, over Harlem, Washington Heights, Over and into the Bronx, over and into Connecticut beyond, Carried west over Hudson, raking up and down Jersey Palisades, Fort Lee to Bayonne. Over all was blown this marvel, a dark compass in the sky. We saw it from a hill in Green-Wood, by Tiffany’s tomb, Acorns, catkins, catalpa fruit littering the manicured grass, Along with charred memos, letters, and newsprint All covered, all covered with thankless ash— In this ash, ashes, the ordinary become SOS, the truth of what was And what is. Upon the ashes of that work Is our work— Begun when there’s ended— In smoke and ash, Twisted steel, exploded glass, When our towers, one after the other, Shuddered and collapsed, Exhausted. Engine 205 (Also at Chiff and Fipple, superimposed on Tom Dowling pic.) Those who know that work is love Know that this work is great love, Work done in the face of death In defiance, in respect, True work, true love, sacrifice— Lives for love, living for love. Ladder 118 (First published at A Small Victory.) How will DNA tell us Whose hand grasped Axe to free trapped Clerks in elevator Shafts— Or which hand Steered fatal jet— Or whose feet bore The weight of Boots, belt, air tank And helmet Up and down flights of Stairs and Into the lighted Pyre. Will the DNA tell us Who loved to dance, Though he danced Badly—or which Plotted to Undo dancer in mid- Dance— Or who, could he Speak once more, Would surely ask, May I have The next dance? Restless and Unsleeping I thought it raged somewhere else— Twister hop scotching Kansas, Flood drowning Minnesota— Always, always somewhere else. But it was racing across Cloudless skies, down calm East Coast, As arsonist, as human Bomb, as some demented god. And from a cell phone inside We got our answer to Where When he said, The fire is here. The Blind Man’s Guide There is no path; there is no road, That we have made, that leads away From doors in flame, from glass-shard floors Guide dog no use but to stay close. But to presume a path will appear, First to blind feet, then to scorched hands, Each step borne by that presumption— That foot will find fall after fall, Descending an obscure staircase Long minute after long minute Until a familiar embrace, Merely imagined up to now, Saying you are home— Brings you home. Labore est orare To retrieve the fallen, To remove the wreckage, And leave? Leaving this field Better than we found it. (The following five poems were first published at The Texas Mercury.) Harbor Out the office, hale and clean pressed Or broken limbed, ash covered Into waiting boat, one of hundreds Tugs, tankers, water taxies, ferries Evacuating under smoke, Going in by radar At high speed, Staten Island Ferry up to 800 rpm, 6,000 passengers one way—out— Urgent, determined, clear That nobody should be sitting down That we couldn’t think of any place else We’d rather be. F-16’s knife through breaks in black billowing Close down over harbor—Didn’t know Whose they were—and on the Hudson, damn If it wasn’t Half Moon Just sitting there in the haze— Almost 400 years to the day Hudson first penetrated New York Harbor— A replica with nothing to do On busiest day in harbor since Melville. Bargemen Her daydream: Two rows of barges, each longer than a stadium, Slowly moving from Manhattan, Leaving a lane between for her ferry, Heading in the opposite direction to terminal, Each barge pushed by a tug, Each tug with a wheelhouse, In each wheelhouse the same silent skipper chomping On cigar, eyes focused straight ahead, beyond The wreckage— A memory of something She’d seen in the papers. Barges One told a magazine writer, At first, the barges were filled with rebar, Which always had some cement attached. There were crows and seagulls everywhere. I didn’t know crows at cement. Ferryman He thought of going over to see how they were doing, The workers he’d ferried in from Jersey— Ants on a hill, digging digging digging. Was ebb tide, all that smoke Sucked out to sea. Steamfitter Steamfitter says he used to line up piling he was driving With the Twin Towers. Harder now, that hard job, Harder— But doable. (The following poem was first published at Poets for the War.) Unabandoned To suffer loss is not to be At a loss. It is to be In loss. In it, there is no Distance any longer Between quick kiss And long goodbye. Such a lie, such a lie To deny this anguish, Prescribing more distance, Even deeper detachment To those severed From such men As we saw that day, In fear, in faith, Inch by inch Pushing back Gates of hell With their bodies. Robert Bové, 2/25/03 Robert Bové is an adjunct instructor in English at Pace University in Manhattan. He is a widely published writer and editor and this is his first contribution to Enter Stage Right. His web site can be found at http://home.earthlink.net/~rcbove/index.htm. Enter Stage Right -- http://www.enterstageright.com