Laura, like Petrarch’s, never
happened, at least here in Houston. Still skittish from Hurricane Harvey three
years ago today, we fussed. We bought batteries, bottled water and “dry goods.”
I spent an afternoon earlier this week clearing the backyard of potential
projectiles – flowerpots, the gas grill, two Adirondack chairs and logs from
the tree I sawed down earlier this month. Everything stowed in the garage. We placed
a last-minute order for cat and dog food. By Wednesday, the suspense
was dispensed. The storm was veering east. Louisiana would get the worst of it.
I woke once early Thursday morning to the sound of – nothing. The sky stayed blue all day. Here is the title
poem from Turner Cassity’s Hurricane Lamp (University of Chicago Press,
1986):
“In warm cut-glass the
geometric fire:
Triangle the half or
diamond the whole,
Unstable in the still the
bright parts pair,
Vibrate, divide; as if to
say the gale
“Engenders in the eye, and
in the wind
Are lapses where the fire
can tower high.
New smoker of a charcoal
filter, mind
You do not burn your fingers
as you try,
“Face lowered toward the
bar, to suck the flame.
In vortices as calm,
ineptness wrecks;
In proper lighters, in the
wettest storm,
The hooded flint rolls
sparks along the thumb.
“Here, have a match. Its
height two hands protect.”
Were we relieved? Of
course. Harvey flooded my car and left us without power for four days – no lights,
no AC. One of the oaks in the front yard might have caved in the roof. But with
relief, I confess, came a little spark of disappointment. There’s something
rousing about enduring disaster safely.
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