The death of a moon cowboy

I am a somewhat-youth with ideas and thoughts and too many dreams that sometimes overflow as these little dribblings from my fingertips. I guess you can try to collect and capture them.


Tuesday, April 07, 2009

How one day a creek became an ocean

When the sun had hardly broken
and underfoot the dirt was cool,
the tireless echo of water flowing
stole my sleep
(pouring and writhing over travertine,
tearing it apart while building it),
woke me before all
the others. The river brown and thick,
the broken branches gathered in smooth eddies.
At the foaming crest
a barrel cactus and dead prickly pear,
thousands of footprints cast in the sand
next to mine. Centered in the current downstream
a remnant of yesterday's makeshift bridge--
a half-submerged picnic bench, mummified
in cottonwood leaves and stringed with sediment.
A hundred devastating feet of the essence of
the desert, its fury distilled, passionate and
heedless, happy and calm in all its eons of
crafting and molding.
Somewhere a gas stove whispers and lights,
soft voices murmur and bodies stir awake
another day.

--- ---

Watched small, clear Havasu Creek turn into a raging flooded river one day in August last year. I wrote about it while watching Jarom at his tumbling class on March 24th.

See all the Havasupai photos.

before, looking over Havasu Falls from above it
looking down on havasu falls [i]

after, the following morning
the falls after the flood

watching the water run thick

7 comments:

heather said...

i love this. somehow i missed it when you posted it last week. (?) anyway i love the idea of "fury distilled" like the desert's immense power somehow gets released in a flood like that, you make the raging water seem actually peaceful in a strange way, like a flood of tears. i love it, and the pictures and video too. NEXT YEAR???

heather said...

oh now i see that you just posted this today! and our other blog was tricking me when it said "one week ago." i noticed the title though and knew it wasn't familiar. anyway, i still love it.

mattbeatty said...

You caught me--I accidentally had the date set wrong, and just reset it (because I *did* post it today!).

Amy Beatty said...

I like the mummified bench, such a perfect description. What a wonderland and day dream away it all seems.

Joseph Beatty said...

this is rad and really gives me some vivid feeling of being there or anywhere at such a time and i am upset at not being there or anywhere right now.

mbhcimlay said...

Your poem makes me feel like I have, up to this point, barely become acquainted with the desert and all its glory. I feel like I could spend my entire life as a nomad roaming from Green River to Springdale to Flagstaff to Mexican Hat, and beyond, and I would still be an infant in my comprehension. I would still be blown away every time something like this happened. Anyhow, thanks for writing such a good poem, and giving a poor law student a break.

mattbeatty said...

Art-- Thanks for reading and your kind comments! I know exactly what you mean about being unable to comprehend the desert, wanting to be a nomad, being awed every time you get to witness one of its natural processes, or even just seeing its results. It's amazing stuff.