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Column 658

The Air Smelled Dirty

Intro by Ted Kooser
10.29.2017

Marge Pier­cy is a dis­tin­guished poet who lives in Mass­a­chu­setts. Her most recent book is Made in Detroit: Poems (Knopf, 2015). I share with her the mem­o­ry of coal fur­naces and clink­ers, which when I was a boy we car­ried out in buck­ets and used to sur­face the neigh­bor­hood alleys. There’s no oth­er sound like clink­ers crunch­ing under­foot. This poem is from the lit­er­ary jour­nal, Third Wednes­day.

The Air Smelled Dirty

Everyone burned coal in our neighborhood,
soft coal they called it from the mountains
of western Pennsylvania where my father
grew up and fled as soon as he could, where
my Welsh cousins dug it down in the dark.
 
The furnace it fed stood in the dank
basement, its many arms upraised
like Godzilla or some other monster.
It was my job to pull out clinkers
and carry them to the alley bin.
 
Mornings were chilly, frost on windows
etching magic landscapes.  I liked
to stand over the hot air registers
the warmth blowing up my skirts.
But the basement scared me at night.
 
The fire glowed like a red eye through
the furnace door and the clinkers fell
loud and the shadows came at me as
mice scampered.  The washing machine
was tame but the furnace was always hungry.
 

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We do not accept unsolicited submissions. American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2017 by Marge Piercy, “The Air Smelled Dirty” from Third Wednesday, (Vol. X, No. 1, 2017). Poem reprinted by permission of Marge Piercy and the publisher. Introduction copyright © 2024 by The Poetry Foundation.