From Book I
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Confusion. All around is churning smoke,
a supernova’s planet-flensing shroud,
an embryonic solar system’s yolk.
No shapes, but for the shadows in the cloud
that swell and sway and pulsate to the loud
oceanic throb, a thunder to convulse
a cosmos, the percussion of a pulse.
*
The fog unravels. But this is no fog,
this blear amalgam of a scumbled dust
and stinging fumes. An isolated leg,
wrapped like a maize ear in a tattered husk
of trouser cotton, glows in noonday dusk.
A headless soldier bows; the freckling paint
has made his gulping pal a stigmaed saint.
*
Across the fuming field, the dying stir
among the dead. Their moaning and their throes
alert the splendid cavalry, who spur
their horses and parade amid their foes.
Wielding their spears as bargemen would use
their staffs to lever flatboats, lancers pole
from man to man and spare no pleading soul.
*
Beyond, more butchery. The rebel town
is bleeding streams of black into the skies,
the way a seal, when sharks have dragged it down,
will stain a turquoise current as it dies.
Across the splintered barricades with cries
of “Death to traitors!” grimy conscripts vault.
The breastworks tumble under their assault.
*
With bayonets, daggers, and naked hands,
the stormers hack and chop and stab and slash.
The slow notes of Deguello from the band’s
emplacement drone through cannon croak and crash;
the melody that Spain learned in its clash
with Muslim arms, “No Quarter,” starts to swell
as Zacatecas is annexed by hell.
From Book VI
And: “Viva el Presidente!” From his mare,
the lord of half the continent surveyed
his legions, felt the chorus shake the air.
Once more he scanned his soldiery, he weighed
the strength of each battalion, each brigade;
at length, his voice echoing, he addressed
his thousands, the Napoleon of the West:
*
“Soldiers of Mexico! The battlefield
of Texas lies before you. Pray no more;
by your own strength your fate will be revealed,
my destiny as well--for you, my corps,
will determine whether ages will deplore
the name of Santa Anna or revere
that proxy for the names of you men here.
*
“My own desire is merely to retire,
to don a rancher’s mantle, hang my sword;
but so long as the foreigners conspire
to steal our patrimony I will ford
whatever river, strike whatever horde,
not from ambition--mine’s a kindly fate,
I’ve got my land--I fight for your estate.
*
“Each one of you shall win his rightful share
of country you will scrape clean with the blade;
the farms the gringo settlers make their lair
shall soon be yours, for joining this crusade.
Your title shall be yanqui rebels laid
within the land they thought to make their own;
they’ll die a second time, when your plows break the bone.
From Book IX
Now Travis gave the order: “Fire at will!”
Along the north facade a dozen bores
erupted. Each cry recorded a kill
or mauling in the moving dark. The force
continued to advance, without remorse
for comrades who had fallen. But the first
reply from the Alamo was not the worst.
*
A lifeless comet’s coal begins to wake
still distant from the sun. Its cinder crust,
though long since petrified, begins to quake
and fissure. All at once, a fan of dust
spurts geysering; then others feed the gust
that veils the crumbling lump in atmosphere.
The halo, the translucent wake, appear.
*
As suddenly, the Alamo exploded.
The cannon on the northern wall spewed out
tornado flame and thunder and corroded
scrap metal that streaked through the shrieking crowd
of infantry. The courage that endowed
the bravest melted in that hellish hail
of superheated horseshoe, pellet, nail.
From Book XII
The conqueror removed his plumed crescent,
a gesture imitated all around
by men who watched their master, grown quiescent,
study his foe awhile without a sound.
Then General Santa Anna faintly frowned.
“At last, Guillermo Travis. Why, you are
so young, to have begun so great a war.”
*
“This man,” he told his aides, “headed the list
I gave these towns last fall. Had they obeyed,
a firing squad might have averted this
catastrophe. By God, this young man made
himself a costly prize. The price we’ve paid. . .”
The self-described Napoleon of the West
reflected, then said, “Burn him with the rest.”
*
Troops lugged the corpse of Travis to a cart,
like fishmongers tossing a silver plank
atop the staring layers in a mart.
Beneath the latest weight the wagon sank,
laden with two armies and every rank.
The wheels protested, then the makeshift hearse
rolled forth, the only obsequy a curse.
*
“The fort’s to be destroyed?” Almonte asked
his master. In the stadium of the siege
Santa Anna stood, an actor who has basked
in warm ovations all alone onstage.
“We’ll leave it to inspire a later age.
As long as Mexicans retell the story
of the Alamo, none shall forget our glory.”
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