Your temples, where the hair crowded in,

Were the tender place. Once to check

I dropped a file across the electrodes

Of a twelve-volt battery – it exploded

Like a grenade. Somebody wired you up.

Somebody pushed the lever. They crashed

The thunderbolt into your skull.

In their bleached coats, with blenched faces,

They hovered again

To see how you were, in your straps.

Whether your teeth were still whole.

The hand on the calibrated lever

Again feeling nothing

Except feeling nothing pushed to feel

Some squirm of sensation. Terror

Was the cloud of you

Waiting for these lightnings. I saw

An oak limb sheared at a bang.

You your Daddy’s leg. How many seizures

Did you suffer this god to grab you

By the roots of the hair? The reports

Escaped back into clouds. What went up

Vaporized? Where lightning rods wept copper

And the nerve threw off its skin

Like a burning child

Scampering out of the bomb-flash. They dropped you

A rigid bent bit of wire

Across the Boston City grid. The lights

In the Senate House dipped

As your voice dived inwards

Right through the bolt-hole basement.

Came up, years later,

Over-exposed, like an X-ray –

Brain-map still dark-patched

With the scorched-earth scars

Of your retreat. And your words,

Faces reversed from the light,

Holding in their entrails.