Poem
Mario Petrucci
Ukritye
Ukritye
Ukritye
Even the robots refuse. Down tools. Jerk uptheir blocked heads, shiver in invisible hail. Helicopters
spin feet from disaster, caught in that upwards cone
of technicide – then ditch elsewhere, spill black running guts.
Not the Firemen. In rubber gloves and leather boots
they walk upright, silent as brides. Uppers begin
to melt. Soles grow too hot for blood. Still they shovel
the graphite that is erasing marrow, spine, balls –
that kick-starts their DNA to black and purple liquid life.
Then the Soldiers. Nervous as children. They re-make it –
erect slabs with the wide stare of the innocent, crosshatch
the wreck roughly with steel, fill it in with that grey
crayon of State Concrete. In soiled beds, in the dreams
of their mothers, they liquefy. Yet Spring still chooses
this forest, where no deer graze and roots strike upwards.
Fissures open in the cement – rain finds them. They grow:
puff spores of poison. Concrete and lead can only take
so much. What remains must be done by flesh.
© 2004, Mario Petrucci
From: Heavy Water: a poem for Chernobyl
Publisher: Enitharmon Press, London
From: Heavy Water: a poem for Chernobyl
Publisher: Enitharmon Press, London
Mario Petrucci
(United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, 1958)
Mario Petrucci is a prolific and powerful poet, known for his themed collections that explore love and loss, scientific consciousness, the natural world and the complexities of warfare.
His poetry is often situational, taking inspiration directly from a key historical site, such as Southwell Workhouse in the volume Fearnought, or the region around Chernobyl in Heavy Water and Half Life. Ecology...
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Ukritye
Even the robots refuse. Down tools. Jerk uptheir blocked heads, shiver in invisible hail. Helicopters
spin feet from disaster, caught in that upwards cone
of technicide – then ditch elsewhere, spill black running guts.
Not the Firemen. In rubber gloves and leather boots
they walk upright, silent as brides. Uppers begin
to melt. Soles grow too hot for blood. Still they shovel
the graphite that is erasing marrow, spine, balls –
that kick-starts their DNA to black and purple liquid life.
Then the Soldiers. Nervous as children. They re-make it –
erect slabs with the wide stare of the innocent, crosshatch
the wreck roughly with steel, fill it in with that grey
crayon of State Concrete. In soiled beds, in the dreams
of their mothers, they liquefy. Yet Spring still chooses
this forest, where no deer graze and roots strike upwards.
Fissures open in the cement – rain finds them. They grow:
puff spores of poison. Concrete and lead can only take
so much. What remains must be done by flesh.
From: Heavy Water: a poem for Chernobyl
Ukritye
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