Saturday, June 19, 2021

Action/ Reaction

If a scream erupts in a forest, and no one hears it

—or if none of the hearers can connect 

the substance of the scream to the face 

of the wounded, whether because 

these hearers are out of sight or otherwise unable 

to perceive how a body nearby could be capable 

of keening like that, or because the hearers are not 

in the habit of connecting the nuanced arrangement 

of particular human features to the nuanced arrangement 

of particular human sounds, when considering a  

particular cry of distress after shutting eyes tight

against any witness— did it happen? 


Same question may be posed 

with other variants. If the cry was piercing 

and potentially recognizable but muffled 

by the presence of a sudden hand 

against an open mouth, does it count?  

If the moment of the cry coincides 

with the collapse of the known world 

and the known world in question 

was once synonymous with the depths 

of the forest, did a cry even happen, 

if the place that it would have 

poured into was suddenly gone? 


Now consider other variables. 

If access is granted, but no one is told, 

does the person at the gates no one was trying 

to approach after years of denial get to shrug, 

raised eyebrows, and claim innocence––based 

on, well, I didn’t say they couldn’t. . . 


Get to: what does this even mean? A body gets 

to do what it will do until acted upon by an opposing 

force. Except in the case of survival. Except in the case 

of protection of children. A body will persist until 

it can’t, and in persisting, adapt to certain givens 

for the sake of survival. As in, this door is locked, 

this knob will burn your hand, this exit will get you 

shot. If someone on the other side unlocks the door 

quietly in the middle of the night, hides the key 

and leaves it closed, is it to be considered open?


Define: cry. Which sounds are included?

Define: pains. Which count?

Define: life. Which forms are we talking about here, 

who is screaming––and who has stopped?


Where do these faces go when they leave us?

Here’s a better question: why do we keep 

insisting that they are ours?


If someone shuts their eyes against some 

never-ending light, can they be considered 

a witness? If someone builds a dam across a river 

of time, can it be stopped, and what is the name 

for the resulting body? And if someone removes 

a dam and the river moves again, now altered 

in shape, is the dam still real, or has it been erased?


If eyes trained on sky notice wild promises in stars, 

do these vows have any bearing once obscured 

by the light pollution of the empire’s cities?


If breath denied failed to void the depth 

of inhalation, what do you call the sound that follows?

The rising, leaning, lilting unsparing hallelujahs of 

nobody knows, the forever-present notes that no hand 

grants and no thief can steal, reaching back to some original 

promise, in the first splitting of atoms, when it was 

discovered that the matter they contained was mostly 

open spaces for the vibration of shimmering notes, 

haunting the seeming solids behind the spectral gates; what is this?


Consider moving. Listen. Consider this breath, the sound 

behind it; consider the open mouth, the next note. 

Sing.




Image: Alma Thomas, Grassy Melodic Chant, 1976, acrylic on canvas, Smithsonian American Art Museum.

About the artistAlma Woodsey Thomas, now a renowned figure of African-American art history, had her debut showing at the age of seventy-five, after a thirty-five year career of teaching art to D.C. junior high school students. 


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