On Not Buying Vintage Oil T-Shirts at Old Navy by Jane Satterfield
In the absence of severe alerts, we drove through the clearing
streets, past yards strewn
with storm debris, here and there dodging
a downed power line
to see where we might save a few cents at the pump.
We might well consider
this week’s body count, the sorrow sustained in our announcer’s
stern face or the one tune
from the man at the top: we must find alternatives to fossil fuel,
same static we’ve been hearing
as long as we’ve been listening.
While shopping I was drawn to the discount table of vintage-style
tees, coveting the muted colors,
and old fashioned oil company logos, signposts of stations—
Texaco, Gulf, Esso, Sinclair—
seen from the back seat of Buicks, Grand Torinos, those gas-guzzling
family cars where we bounced along,
sans seat belts, watching the world going by. Today a corps of
engineers struggles with a containment
cap. With the right app I could click as I shop, access
the list of federal
Agencies involved in response to the gallons hemorrhaged
By a dynamically positioned
Semi-submersible rig. Noise cannons keep birds from landing
In contaminated areas.
Apocalypse and empire— . We might wade out into silence.
And if later I somehow ease
into sleep, will I wake as I did more than a decade ago,
from the dream of rigs
burning a smoke script across the whirling desert sky?
Read more of Jane Satterfield's poems in the Spring 2015 edition of the Delaware Poetry Review.