Showing posts with label Land Rover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Land Rover. Show all posts

Saturday, January 22, 2022

The Sea of Lot


        We started out from Amman.
        
        The road is a scant thread
        that follows the form
        of the mountains closely,
        swerving and veering
        on the edge of gravity
        as we skirt potholes,
        continuously fringed by chasms
        of every size and sort.
        Zoom past lorries
        and trucks brightly painted.
        Drive and drive
        in a lunar landscape as
        the terrain straightens and sinks.
        
        Check points slow us down,
        but mostly the young, serious soldiers,
        dressed in olive and armed,
        just wave us through.
    
        We arrived at the Dead Sea
        unexpectedly-
        Not at the Spa, where
        people go to float
        and read a paper
        as if lounging comfortably...
        No, not the Spa, but on past all people,
        just happenstance-
        bump off the road
        and bump down so close
        to what seems to be a cliff drop;
        but it wasn't an edge
        just a little stubble of a hill                             
        for feet to race down the shifting
        stone sand and arms to reach out
        into the warm breeze
        
        and skip stones in the buoyant Salt Sea.

        Take a stick and stir,
        the minerals come up like oil
        clinging to the surface
        following the path of the stick
        and elaborating on it's every motion.

        We had such a pleasant interlude
        Enshallah


        Let the children play.

        Back to the car;
        bump back to the road
        rumble jerk
        over what would be a meadow
        if it were green:
        It feels like driving
        over a plowed field,
        deeply furrowed
        and thrashing us about
        until we reach
        the smooth macadam
        of the new road
        along the Dead Sea


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Picnic

       
        The Land Rover leaps up off the road
        lurch lunging up a cliff with all the bounce and bound
        of crashing down a cliff...

        Squeeze through an eroding pass
        with scarcely a thread breadth on both sides,         
        scarcely a thread breadth between us and a
        steep tumble down bounce and crash
        precipice.

        Crunch up a landscape
        that leaves no trace of our passage,
        just tumbled rocks and dust
        that dance.
    
        Choose a spot-
        sameness spans all sight,
        its only distinction is
        that the Land Rover
        has stopped.

        Spill out to feast on pita bread
        and goat cheese sandwiches-
        Food that doesn't mind being squished.

        Step delicately among goat turd
        and minuscule wildflower;
        it's quite easy to twist an ankle
        on windswept rock.
        
        Eyes flit over the treacherous track
        it will take to return;
        a swig of cool water from a jar
        empowers
        and off we go.

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Moab's Hills


        All the hills
        in a prophet's eye...

        In our Land Rover,
        we leave the low, flat landscape
        that holds the shimmering Salt Sea.
        
        The smooth straight road
        reaches up into the mountains,
        where it wraps itself tightly
        into curves following contours.
        Knolls rush up at us only to fall
        sharply away, arising as other hills
        farther on, farther up emerge,
        both steeper and softer.

        Eyes scan across yet another
        canyon as we careen,
        always on edge; and suddenly-
        huge faces in the rock emerge,
        like Mount Rushmore,
        but no man-made chisel carved
        the stunning contour of features
        set to emanate from the avalanche of time-
        the avalanche of fluent rock erosion,
        staring back at me.
        
        Craggy, weather worn, furrowed faces
        watching with eyes that are nimble shadows-
        shelves and slants and surface
        gnawed by time and tale.
        The road leaps sharply up and
                                        

        I look down deep rocky
        chasms, that approach
        with lurch and loom
        and sloping plateaus
        sprigged with stony pasture:
 
        Each relatively level patch
        bears one lone shepherd-
        Bedouin robes draping him
        with historical allusions.
        
        Black rocks become a tumble of goats.
        White stone stubble...browsing sheep.
        Height-depth-dark-light-
        nothing seems anything
        except ancient.

        Even recent excavations
        (crude surface mining)
        has the appearance
        of an archaeologist's mound
        divulging treasure;
        gnawed by time and tale.

poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Kerak


        A Crusader's Castle.
        A great bastion of European design...
        
        We've come from the Dead Sea    
        where we skipped small flat stones
        that skimmed happily over towards Jerusalem.

        We've come through Moab's Hills;
        hills that seemed so gently round from far away
        until the road leapt up, leaving your heart
        skipping, skimming over towards Jerusalem,
        as the car ricocheted off in the opposite direction.

        Wildflowers are everywhere &
        sheep & goats & shepherds
        earth untouched by modern stuff,
        just landscape dramatically rising every which way.
 
        The Crusader's Castle dominates,
        claims the entire top of distant
        mountain we're heading towards,    
        as if it is the greatest thing in all this wonderful world,
        the most magnificent construction
        in all this incredible land
        and it seems omnipotent, irrepressible-
        until we come up to the summit and reach
        the crowded little town of Karaoke.
        
        Throngs of Arab Citizens
        are making their way about the bustle
        of everyday lives: Shopping. Chatting. Shuffling.
        Stopping to stare at the obvious strangers
        in the Land Rover bumbling slowly
        through the tight maze of streets.
        
        Low buildings block our view of the great castle.
        My fair-haired sons are like luggage tossed about
        in the back of the car, looking out as others look in.
        
        Curious.

        We've invaded the afternoon,
        come charging in with our strange ways
        and a shinny car and weird clothes
        and odd hair and pale flesh:
        Invaded this busy town's rhythms and patterns.
        Irrevocably disrupted both duty and leisure,
        in our reckless search for the Crusaders Castle.

        We struggle up and down
        narrow jammed streets
        that might (or might not) be
        the way leading to the our castle.
        
        A kindly stranger on the very crowded street
        who is armed with a word or two of our own
        odd language, takes pity on our obvious plight,
        steps gallantly forward, and politely directs us
        to our destination.

        Having eluded the town itself,
        we come to the castle…

        We step out of the warm swaddling of our familiar car,
        leaving its hot shelter to feel cool strong sunlight
        caught on light breezes that wash us with airs  
        and we enter the castle through its gate.
        We pass through thick walls of stone.
                                        

        Large blocks of stone laid neatly,
        tightly together to form the fortification
        that's now only good for
        intriguing and holding captive
        the occasional invasions of tourists,
        or sheltering a flock of nibbling goats.
        We scramble over and under
        and through the ruins
        that every which way overlook
        and command an impressive view.

        It's a large place
        with expanses of space underfoot
        that stretch like stadiums all around.
        Inside and out.
        Over there is a mound,
        closer it becomes a dark stair
        curling out of a rock that becomes a wall,
        and leads down to a cavernous hall
        lit by high narrow slit windows.

        Sound echoes in eerie ways:
        Footstep might be horse stomp.
        Dust shimmers in precise wedges
        of nebulous light
        let in by the slit windows.

        We walk in a duskiness of old stone
        surrounded by space paved
        below, beside, and high above- all long ago,
        walled and roofed, what did it hold?
        Who were they- as foolish as my own sensitive self
        imagining the glimmer of armor moving,
        the clink of a cup laid aside
        Imagining that only I have the wisdom
                                        
        to penetrate this experience
        and explain.
 
        For all the beauty of the day
        the perfect weather,
        pleasant companionship
        and intriguing history
        I find myself shuddering
        cringing
        not enjoying it as I should-
        
        These rocks emanate
        hostility.
        There seems a cruel touch
        within in the sheltering walls
        a corruption
        trying to taint me
        until
        we come to a chapel.

        Built with in the castle,
        almost central
        on its lofty plateau
        The far portion of its high roof,
        once arced with stone wedged tightly,
        has fallen to expose blue heaven above.
        
        Wild flowers sprig out of the rock
        up on the edge that's left
        in the tall stone wall.
        
        The altar is a small meadow
        where Queen Anne's Lace bloom
        and sparrows flit
        and sing.
                                        
        A chapel reclaimed,
        from a tortuous past.
        Karaoke reclaimed
        by light and air
        and wildflowers.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab

Calmly Cruising



    We're on our way to
    take a buggy ride:

    Calmly cruising,
    in our sport utility vehicle,
    on the edge of a mountain top road
    that will takes us down
                towards Petra...

    Jaffar catches the blast
    of sonic boom:
    He steers the Land Rover off
            onto the dusty berm,
    and thrusts the gear into park.  
    He leaps up and out, detecting the trace
    of two gleaming gray jets as they pierce
    sound and sight chasing speed-

    A tilting metallic glimmer through
    the deep canyon of red rock at our feet.

    The two jets cut long swathes of space
    as straight as a Roman Road Airborne.
    Pitch and roll and flash past,
        dazzling my dazed husband
    who slumps back into the car
    muttering that he never thought
    he'd ever see
    a jet perform
    
            below his feet.


poem copyright ©2000 Anne Selden Annab