ROTHKO VIA MUNCIE, INDIANA

The 1980s. Beginning of the long decade, the century’s

late works. Snow on the grid, field bisected

by a new-model John Deere’s progress in low gear

with a front-end load of straw bales. Its operator’s daughter

dons her brace, thinks her scoliosis the devil’s work

on her, a not-good-enough Christian. Her mother talks

scripture on the phone in the kitchen and the kitchen

smells of coffee and it smells of dog. Christmas lights

strung along the eaves of bungalows, vehicles moored

to bungalows by their block heater cords. Rumours

of drunkenness and corruption sunk the Democrat’s bid

for mayor. For we favour the simple expression of the complex

thought. The large shape’s impact of the unequivocal. Flat forms

that destroy illusion and reveal truth. Now the union’s eye

has twilight in it, and the city dump will stay where it is.

Evening falls, or rises, or emanates from the figures.

The SportsPlex and Model Aviation Museum, the Muncie

Mall and both quadrangles of Ball State University

shed their associations, perform an unknown adventure

in unknown space. Halogens illuminate an anecdote

of the spirit. You won’t see his face around here again.

The violet quarry hosts a greater darkness further in,

the White River sleeps in its cabin of pack ice.

Among the graduating class an abstract feeling develops,

an inclination to symbolism born of the fatal car wreck on

New Year’s, a spike in requests for Bob Seger

to the call-ins from a quasi-religious experience of limitless

immensity. To achieve this clarity is inevitably

to be misunderstood. Their lives take on the dimensions

of the fields, the city, its facades and its plan, whose happiness

will be their own. Rent, food budget, sweaters

indoors. Basketball, basketball, and a second marriage.