Jody Bolz

Pandemic Fugue
February 22, 2021 Bolz Jody

PANDEMIC FUGUE

 
 

I

 

These are the skies of my childhood
cloudbanks incandescent against a deepening blue
and the earth strangely still below

 

still but not silent birds chorusing
at daybreak at dusk so like the cusps
of night in childhood a rasp of rain

 

stirring in the leaf-haze no whirr of traffic
no planes above the river
only clouds that flare like festival lanterns

 

against a deepening blue as if this
were an earlier world the unmapped earth
of ice-fields marshlands forests

 

circling seasons migratory wonder
not a world on fire

 

II

 

Is the world on fire
clouds like funeral lamps
hanging in a fever dream

 

delirium contagion
gurneys crammed in corridors
sirens chorusing across a thousand cities

 

while the unharmed stay at home
watching in wonder as their neighborhoods
grow wilder deer scuffling

 

in the April brush rabbits in the garden
redbud seedlings swaying
by a shuttered shop

 

alleyways in bitter blossom
sky a color I’d almost forgotten

 

III

 

The sky’s a color I’d almost forgotten
fathomless blue of skies over the mountains
where I walked when I was young

 

unharmed within a wildness
that I’ve forsworn terrified I’ll vanish
into thinning air why take a risk

 

when I can lean against my window
fortunate sequestered surveying
the local world at daybreak at dusk

 

no traffic above us
no traffic on the greening ground
cars parked by the millions

 

on city streets in fields and barns
deserted rides at the end of the carnival

 

IV

 

Deserted rides at the end of a carnival
just before the lines are cut the plugs are pulled
though even now the sky puts on a show

 

clouds drift like fire balloons past
sickroom windows but who can look out
when monitors are measuring each

 

movement breath-beat heartbeat
sounding alarms through the floodlit hours
delirium contagion gurneys wheeled

 

in terror down the crowded corridors
oh where are their families now
the ones who left them here alone

 

snared in a fever dream feral
as a fox on the streets of the city

 

V

 

Flash of a fox on the streets of the city
and a park becomes a wilderness
time turns back on itself disencumbering hours

 

complicating lifetimes do you think
we’re growing younger as the built world falters
what was commerce what was city life

 

we walk beside the river in the burning hour
dusk a shade of red that reels into blue
a shift we call evening

 

and watch the light blaze violet
along the boughs of sycamores
their dry leaves wide as faces in a dusk

 

so like the dusks we haunted once
in bright gauze masks

 

VI

 

In my bright cloth mask
my mask of gratitude and guilt
my mask of confusion

 

I step outside in half-light
the color of my age
deer a silvered throng

 

idling on the autumn lawn
songbirds in leaf-haze
inviolable enchanted free

 

which I thought myself to be
when I was a child
tearing through the tall grass

 

at the end of our street
a fire in the edge-land

 

VII

 

Fires course through edge-lands
all across the West
turn the air a sour gold

 

visible from space
while the virus burns its way
around the earth unseen

 

we shelter in the local world
leaf-strewn blocks tricked out
with skeletons and headstones

 

bats strung like market goods
from tree to tree how
eerily the phantoms shimmer

 

in and out of sight underneath
the skies of childhood

 

Jody Bolz’s most recent books of poetry are The Near and Far and the novella-in-verse Shadow Play, both from Turning Point. She received her BA and MFA from Cornell, where she studied with A.R. Ammons, and taught creative writing for more than 20 years at George Washington University. Her work has appeared widely in literary magazines (The American Scholar, Ploughshares, Poetry East, Prairie Schooner, and Southern Poetry Review among them) and poetry anthologies. From 2002-2019, Bolz edited the journal Poet Lore, founded in 1889.