Dane Slutzky
My Battery is Low and It’s Getting Dark
For Opportunity, the Mars Rover, 2004-2019
No human programmed
you to be poetic.
You didn’t craft
a sentence, but
sent data, after a
delay via satellite,
in an ontological
structure—battery:
low. Tau level: rising.
One last grainy
half-complete photo
of the sky, stars streaked
with lines. We offer
animal experience: hormones,
lactic acid, sorrow.
Ancient channels
now dirt divots.
Newly hatched
from a rocket
your petals fell open to a shine of
gold and brass, you, shaking out your wings,
opened your beady lenses
(for you to see)
and wide eyes
(for us to see)
stuck from your stalky neck.
You turned on and there, in the crater wall,
exposed bedrock, layered—
formed in water! Once:
salty, acidic,
Martian.
Into the heart
of Perseverance
Valley, Endeavor
Crater, their names
a form of blessing, ours,
you surfed
wind-blown dunes
There
a bleak horizon. Here a flow so
long dead
we only saw its smoothed stones, eroded gullies.
We imagined
dust wiped with fresh rain.
NASA
called you little miss
perfect. An overachiever.
Your battery ran
low. It grew dark on Mars.
Our eyes are sweating.
I’m not crying, you’re
crying. We made memes
of cartoon-
robot faces. We imagined
a someday when humans
lived on Mars.
The photographs:
a comet
before Martian dawn
a dust devil, that vortex
of dirt and air,
the backward glance
to your tracks,
into the stark
horizon
Dane Slutzky
Dane Slutzky’s poetry has most recently appeared in Scoundrel Time, hold: a journal, and Bitterzoet Magazine. He is currently an MFA candidate at Warren Wilson College and lives in Western Massachusetts.