RODNEY JONES
The Assault on the Fields
It was like snow, if snow could blend with air and hover,
making, at first,
A rolling boil, mottling the pine thickets behind the
fields,
but then flattening
As it spread above the fenceposts and the whiteface cattle,
an enormous, luminous tablet,
A shimmering, an efflorescence, through which my father
rode on his tractor,
Masked like the Martian or a god to create the cloud where
he kept vanishing;
Though, of course, it was not a cloud or snow, but poison,
dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane,
The word like a bramble of black locust on the tongue,
and, after a while,
It would fill the entire valley, as, one night in spring,
five years earlier,
A man from Joe Wheeler Electric had touched a switch
and our houses filled with light.
Already some of the music from the radio went with me
when the radio was off.
The bass, the kiss of the snare. Some of the thereness
rubbing off on the hereness.
But home place still meant family. Misfortune was a well
of yellowish sulfur water.
of yellowish sulfur water.
The Flowerses lived next door. Coyd drove a road grader
for the county.
Martha baked, sewed, or cleaned, complaining beautifully
of the dust
Covering her new Formica counters. Martha and Coyd,
Coyd Jr., Linda, and Jenny.
How were they different from us? They owned
a television,
Knew by heart each of the couples on Dick Clark’s
American Bandstand.
At dust Junior, the terrible, would beat on a cracked
and unfrettable Silvertone guitar.
While he pitched from the top of his wayward voice
one of a dozen songs
He’d written for petulant freshman girls. ‘Little Patti,’
‘Matilda,’
‘Sweet Bonnie G.’ What did the white dust have to do
with anything?
For Junior, that year, it was rock’n’roll; if not
rock’n’roll,
then abstract expressionism –
One painting comes back. Black frame.
Black canvas –
‘I call it Death,’ he would say,
Then stomp out onto the front lawn to shoot his .22 rifle
straight into the sky above his head.
Surely if Joel Shapiro’s installation of barbed wire and
crumbled concrete blocks,
In a side room of the most coveted space in Manhattan,
pays homage
To the most coveted space in Manhattan, then Junior
Flowers’s Death,
Hanging on a wall dingy with soot in North Albama,
is a comment, too.
Are they the same thing? I do not know that they are not
the same thing.
And the white dust, so magical, so poisonous: how does it
differ from snow?
As it thins gradually over many nights, we don’t notice
it; once the golden
Carp have rotted from the surfaces of ponds, there is no
stench to it;
It is more of an absence of things barely apprehended,
of flies, of moths;
Until one day the hawks who patrolled the air over
the chicken coops are gone;
And when a woman, who was a girl then, finds a lump,
what does it have to do
With the green fields and the white dust boiling
and hovering?
When I think of the name Jenny Flowers, it is that
whiteness I think of.
Some bits have fallen to clump against a sheet of tin
roofing
The tornado left folded in the ditch, and the stoops there
to gather
A handful of chalk to mark the grounds for hopscotch.
“The Assault on the Fields” by Rodney Jones is a 12-stanza
poem in free verse that comments on the reality of pesticides. Jones takes his time to recount his
personal experience with the white dust of dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane. His
tone is serious, but charmingly intimate. His early use of alliteration (“Masked like a Martian,”
“bramble of black”) alludes to the initially casual way people responded to the
poisonous dusting. His conversational
sound weaves together with his generously detailed and punctuated long lines to
remind us of real lives that were affected by use of this pesticide and the
duration of its impact. He takes
the time to illustrate coverage, significance and the long-term effect with two
metaphors: describing the dust as filling the valley as electric power had done
with light five years before and how music from the radio was beginning to stay
with him after he had turned the radio off. These images not only help to instill his point, but also
provide a historical context for the poem.
“Dear sisters and brothers,
we urge all of you
not to stop living,
to be a part of the rebirth of utopias,
to recover and defend the struggling dream
of Appalachia itself.
For it is the weak things of this world
which seem like folly
that the Spirit takes up
and makes its own.
The dream of the mountains’ struggle,
and the dream of simplicity
and of justice,
like so many other repressed visions
is, we believe,
the voice of the Lord among us.
In taking them up again,
Hopefully the church
might once again
be known as
- a center of the Spirit,
- a place where poetry dares to speak,
- where the song reigns unchallenged,
- where art flourishes,
- where nature is welcome,
- where humble people and humble needs come first,
- where justice speaks loudly,
- where in a wilderness of idolatrous
destruction the
great voice of God
still cries out for
Life.”
This poem, the closing prayerful plea of the 1975
Appalachian Pastoral Letter, This Land is Home to me, follows a carefully crafted,
poetic discussion assembled and indorsed by the Catholic Bishops of
Appalachia. The document, and this
poem, detail the injustices brought to the people and land of Appalachia. As I read this piece after having
considered “The Assault on the Fields,” my mind is filled with its
visualizations. As the father and
neighbor woman in “Assault” proceed blindly through the fallen poison, I am
struck with the feeling that they aren’t living in the sense employed by the
Bishops. They are not alive to the
world and the destruction that engulfs them. As Jones describes the haunt and effect of the “snow” on his
community he, as an observer in this piece, takes on the action that the
Bishops cry to see. I have the
sense, however, that in the heart of the experience, Jones was just a boy. He was not the mover, shaker and
muckraker that the Bishops hope the Catholic church can be. As I read these poems together, I am
filled with the longing for the church, as it is envisioned, to be a place
where Jones’ poetry of justice can be heard and acted upon and where Junior and
Jenny’s art and lives can grow and be connected to the reality of their
situations and be appreciated.
Disconnect
Sitting next to you I wonder:
How is your grandmother?
How old were you when you lost your first tooth?
Who has caused that shadow on your heart?
Humans, we are
Sometimes only remotely connected.
We see
But won’t allow
Meaning.
Do we not trust our intuitions?
Or, do we
Just not want to spend
The time.
In nature I see no
WALLS
No place where boundaries
Clash.
Differences of opinion flit
But connectedness is king.
The shape of your silhouette
May be all I remember
When I stand up
Having not made you
Real to me.
___
___
Jones, Rodney. “Assault on the
Fields.” Wild Reckoning: An Anthology Provoked by Rachel Carson's Silent
Spring. Ed. Burnside, John, Maurice Riordan. London: Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, 2004. 24. Print.
Spring. Ed. Burnside, John, Maurice Riordan. London: Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, 2004. 24. Print.
Catholic Bishops of Appalachia.
This Land is Home to Me. Martin: Catholic Committee on Appalachia, 1975.
Print.
Print.
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