The town has always felt
darker and meaner to me
than any city ever has.
Although I loved its woods and
how many of its dirt roads remained
unpaved well into my twenties,
it still felt too often like an evil
had slipped out of the settler past
and come to rest on the hilltops,
in the quarries, along its rivers
still slimy with the residue
of woolen dyes drained
from its long gone mills. An antique
dimness to the sunrise, a blood tone
to the sunset, a prehistoric
scent in the dark. We all knew
there’d been murders, rapes,
and more; every town has its share
of course, but somehow we nodded
ours away as almost quaint.
We’d heard the Klan had met
in the Town Hall once, or maybe more;
people didn’t like to speak of it,
New England being as self-deluding then
as it still is. Somewhere among the rocks
on the northern edge was a spot
where English killed Native,
or Native killed English; stories differed
but it’s clear: those deaths remained
in our definition; the land still howls it;
forever it has keened beneath
the politesse, the etiquette, the reticence
of old timers. When I drive here now
on infrequent visits, I see it in
flags and bumper stickers, I hear it
in casual slander in diners, I taste it
in the perfect water drawn up from wells
that everyone praises, that were sunk through
rocks like those still faintly stained with blood
up on the northern edge of town. I lived here once,
I tell myself on the way back out of town.
I don’t have to live here still, but somehow
I still do. I can only forget
when I’m back in the city,
far from the dead
no one will speak of,
and all the sounds
of their disquieting ghosts:
But we love it here, it’s so pretty,
they say. We love it here,
who would ever want to leave?
