Even the Ohio Can Change
Even the Ohio Can Change Rick Campbell The river I grew up on was rank with oil. Shoreline stones gleamed slick-blue and nothing in the river was worth a slug of scrap metal: carp and catfish, sick, riddled with chemical blood. My river was for barges, owned by US Steel, ARMCO, J&L. They pumped it full of slag, dripped and drained oil and gas through a thousand hidden holes. Nothing good could come of it except a living and life, a whole valley's clinging dream. The Indians who named it beautiful river weren't wrong; how could they know what would come, dark and sooty, burning the sky, turning the earth to mud and cinder. Even in our terrible need we couldn't kill it and the river is coming back to river once again. In the cold ruin of the Ohio's banks muskies swim the secret paths below. We grow older, the river younger, and great fish smash into the air to swallow a caterpillar fallen from a willow branch. |