bronzeage
I am a river to my people
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2005
- Posts
- 49,685
As general rule, it should not be necessary to explain a poem. The images used in this piece should be familiar to anyone who lives in an oil town. For those who do not have the benefit of living next door to one of the world's largest oil refineries, I include this short note.
When crude oil is refined there are unusable waste products. A refinery has several tall towers called stacks, which have a high temperature gas burner at the top. This burner is called a flare. Waste products are piped to the flare and incinerated. Sometimes there is a mechanical breakdown in the refinery and perfectly good product has no place to go. It is sent to the stack to burn. When all the flares are lit at the same time, it usually sign something has gone very wrong.
It's midnight under a cotton candy sky.
Exxon is refining daylight.
The flares paint the clouds
with the unneeded and unwanted spirits
of petrochemicals.
Too much of this and some of that leftover.
It all goes to the stack and burns in the night air.
Waste not, want not, wish not, want not.
The flare fades to a smoky glow against the morning sky, its job finished,
and I wonder what lesson I have missed,
of how to burn the waste until the want is extinguished
and if anyone looked to the sky,
the night I went to the stack.
When crude oil is refined there are unusable waste products. A refinery has several tall towers called stacks, which have a high temperature gas burner at the top. This burner is called a flare. Waste products are piped to the flare and incinerated. Sometimes there is a mechanical breakdown in the refinery and perfectly good product has no place to go. It is sent to the stack to burn. When all the flares are lit at the same time, it usually sign something has gone very wrong.
It's midnight under a cotton candy sky.
Exxon is refining daylight.
The flares paint the clouds
with the unneeded and unwanted spirits
of petrochemicals.
Too much of this and some of that leftover.
It all goes to the stack and burns in the night air.
Waste not, want not, wish not, want not.
The flare fades to a smoky glow against the morning sky, its job finished,
and I wonder what lesson I have missed,
of how to burn the waste until the want is extinguished
and if anyone looked to the sky,
the night I went to the stack.