Deluge Poem by Robert Charles Howard

Deluge



Rain clouds hover in the night
veiling the crystal moon -
spraying steady showers
on the hills and plains below.

The Missouri stirs from slumber
spreading claws of water up its banks
as rain sheets, lashed to horizontal
saturate the fields and valleys.

Illumined by the misted moon
The river’s shoreline grows
by inches through the night -
stealing into ever higher ground.

Daybreak finds new ponds conjoined
and spilled across low lying roads
and TV teasers sound their alarms.
'Stay tuned, tape at 10: 00.'

Downpours to the west and north
saturate Mississippi valleys and
Saint Louis flood gates rumble closed.
Farmers abandon all hope for harvest.

Our screens chant nightmare litanies
of sandbag crews and second floor rescues,
crumbling levies and sunken vehicles -
a twisting farmhouse claimed for driftwood.

The clouds’ reservoirs at last are spent,
the inland sea recedes to lakes
and our weary cousins stumble home
as the Mississippi quietly relearns it banks.

March, 2008

This poem is a recollection of the great flood of 1993 but as it was written the rivers around St. Louis passed over flood stage and the city flood gates were closed. While protecting the city, the gates and levees ship the problem downstream where it intensifies the plight of small towns that are now under water. Continued rain in the Missouri and Mississippi watersheds could cause the current flood to rival that of 1993.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Alison Cassidy 25 March 2008

Superbly paced poem - with its slow crescendo building to an explosive and terrifying climax followed by the soft resolution of the last couplet. Beautifully written too (like all of yours) - not a word out of place and some particularly noteworthy images. 'Spreading claws of water up its banks', 'Our screens chant a litany of nightmares: ' and: 'as the river relearns it banks.' You share your drama with great skill. love, Allie ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥

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Not a member No 4 25 March 2008

Being a part of it through numerous lifetimes all such events affect us in more ways than we can explain it seem, and as I read this Robert I could feel the coded complex of emotions take hold. You pace and describe it perfectly, building the tension and threat gradually before draining it away in the end in poem time.. wonderful poem. jim

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Sandra Fowler 24 March 2008

'Majestic' is the word that came to me as I read this. Great rivers have inspired the pens of poets time out of mind. Excellent write. As always, Sandra

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