But what about the electric guitar? What if no walls

of amps warm & humming, no hand cradling strangely

tender feedback? My day begins in the dark,

 

coastline train-clatter, two more blocks of uncolored

pavement. Imagine life without it: days 

like a sidewalk. Oh Richmond benzene, Richmond

 

mercury. How in a hundred you spent down for us 

a hundred million summers. Your stills, your condensers.

Stove coils glowed on hills looking out on you, asphaltum, 

 

grease, pale: words we didn’t want to know. Where salt water

 

marshes had rustled, ducks greened & speckled “in myriads,”

men sent from oil found abandoned ranches, a deep enough 

 

bay, rails terminating. They zipped up your neck Richmond, 

cast iron miles of pipe, mountains of copper for the three-

phasing current that your agitators might shake. Benzol, 

 

zylol for dynamite. Highways unfurled, oceans overnighted,

from towers rippled wavelengths. New kinds of tones 

blued off a Fender neck, fuzzed, trembled our car doors. Today 

 

the 11th of February will be fifteen degrees 

 

too warm. A train will go by where for a wage 

I drag metal-clad cable into walls, airhorn drawing out

 

the bawl of progress. As it burns through you: swollen hulls

I always try not to see nesting at the shoreline north 

of my life. Richmond polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons

 

tucked into the wind, could I gauze what was missing

with headphones? Molecules catalytic-cracked to gasoline,

we drove away miles by the thousands, jetted them back.

 

Your tankers chuffed under the bridge. From your white-coated

work weeks sprang paraxylene for nylons, our skin was surprised,

phenol for glue to ply our plywoods. Houses sprawled,

 

you continued to do 300,000 barrels a day. Rivers

 

of kerosene to Bombay, Hanoi, nowhere too far. Oh city

that bore Standard Oil into the Pacific, tanker cars

clacked in before you had a city hall: Richemont,

 

by sword your name from a Norman hilltown to English castles

by gun to us. Every year a million pounds of heavy metals

into your air, onto Castro Cove’s sludge-bottom. Chevroned 

 

gulls wheel in our choices. Their lack. In my ears,

notes a magnet drew from wires flumed like schools 

of fish. Richmond how would we be without you,

 

our hospitals’ constant hum, shimmer of components spirited

from everywhere to our thumbs. On a carpet of carbon

flying. I stepped down from something diesel

 

to search bins for the sound of anger & queen jealousy, Bold

as Love, driven through tubing. Out of vinyl flaring, fingers

 

of Jimi Hendrix, about to swallow too much fire.