Our Lady of Chernobyl
I feel important driving you,
your sneakers on the dash,
our pants and shoes filled
with the gulf shores,
feet peeling and burning
from the sand.
Your stomach aches from a screaming
shrimp gumbo eaten too quickly,
the chicharrones bought
in Birmingham, and a hunger for sleep.
We left at one in the morning,
arrived at noon to see
the placid school of deathly stingrays,
who swim with us in the rushing green.
Satisfied, we promptly return
to the highway.
On the Alabama red clay roads,
windshields and headlamps are canvas—
lightning bugs mug yellow
bioluminescence in streaks
when we slam into them,
rendering the paste we enjoyed as kids.
The air is a wildering pine.
One loses themselves among:
the salty, vociferous wild turkeys,
the sight of armadillos dodging traffic,
snaggle toothed opossums running fence,
and absolutely everywhere—
the allergy producing plants
known to the American South.
I wipe my face, blow my nose, pray
the truck doesn’t look the same as the tissue
glowing in the dark just as the kitsch,
novelty Virgin Mary in the corner
of my elementary school room.
We surrounded her with silk flowers,
and shelved her above clicking base board
heaters; we might have dubbed her
Our Lady of Chernobyl.
On this springtime day
I promise I will let you down—
there is no other way to begin
but to admit the truth.
Night. Awake in Nashville,
rosary beads turning in my sleep
as diligently as the garden earth
you will till for our children to grow
tomatoes, zucchinis,
and aubergines—
I am awake in Nashville afraid
to fail you, thinking
maybe
I am finally a man.
12 thoughts on "Our Lady of Chernobyl"
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This is a touching narrative. If you are going to foreshadow –just a little bit — what better image than Chernobyl? I really dig this poem, Manny. Well done!
thank you Linda…. those Chernobyl statues are the real thing. I wonder if you’ve ever seen one. Who would think a glow in the dark Mary Mother of God would be a good idea? Who knows? I appreciate your comments, as always.
Your poems are such marvelous portraits …
Loved these lines:
“The air is a wildering pine.
One loses themselves among:”
Kevin
Very glad this morning to be here reading.
Great poem, lot’s of great lines and images, “the air is a wildering pine,” good ending pulls it together
Thank you Mr. Wilson
Well-rendered narrative full of great building detail. I loved “Our Lady of Chernobyl.”
Thank you kind sir.
The narrator here is in imminence. Did I say that right? I have taken this route to NOLA. Those Meridian fish houses are a distraction for sure.
a dozzy of a road trip poem with the wonderful aside where the title is stashed and the final line wherein it leads to epithany (maybe)
Our shoes filled with the gulf shores all the way to afraid of failing you and I’m almost a man. Enjoyed the poem.
Thanks to all 🖤🖤🖤