Magnetic North
by Alice Templeton
1.
Here is my compass my parting gift
Flattened pennies half a heart would do
but this is my chosen pact: point of reference
place of convergence no one’s destination
Agree with me This is an urge we will honor
the casual yearning toward north orienting us
until the day our world turns in its vast sleep
reversing the ordinary poles
2.
Even standing still we dwell in countless spaces
I mark my place on the street squaring up to gutters
tuning my breath to the broken drum of traffic
I fix myself in time by jobs or songs
by the length of winters with or without
the chafe of love And gazing down from the bluff
I judge my foothold by the river’s crazy logic
my likeness buoyed on the impish surface sunk
in a single swirling eye Where am I?
3.
Where do I meet you if you or I get lost
caught in a turnstile confused by the sting of volts
and barbs guarding the shiftless borders?
Walk the face of this earth gouged by machines
that lumber across it ripping deliberate wounds
and you will come to a rift that stops you short…
4.
The practical map is marked by ‘true’ north
the world in neat degrees latitudes and longitudes
pinned to the ends of the earth’s axes packaged
parcels of angular blue and green drawn
from high above A different path oblique
and strange takes as its direction the pull and play
of magnetic north Moored loosely to nowhere
it drifts imperceptibly in our time creeping toward
cataclysm a thousand or a billion years away
salvation or doom turning the earth on its head
and the charts inside out
5.
I want no maps
no prophecies just this compass to remind me:
this is a force that keeps us ever tremulous
always found With every turn the needle
quivers northward despite a worried hand
and designs warping the land Drawn to imbalance
into another step we make our way by fevers
and gesture Feel us lean our bodies straining
the vain boundaries of ‘true’ north bent
to the call of our singular place and time pulled
by this gently moored desire to know for ourselves
where we are and how amid such damage
the earth’s body still guides our own
Alice Templeton’s poems have appeared in Calyx, Poetry, Nimrod, Asheville Poetry Review, and elsewhere. Her poetry chapbook Archaeology won the 2008 New Women’s Voices Prize in Poetry from Finishing Line Press. She has been a resident at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, the Millay Colony, Blue Mountain Center, and Vermont Studio Center, and is currently on the board of the Money for Women/Barbara Deming Memorial Fund. Originally from Tennessee, she now lives in Berkeley, California.