Nuclear Winter: Poetry of the Apocalypse

The Unthinkable

NUCLEAR WINTER is an attempt to think about the unthinkable consequences of a full-blown, planetary nuclear war. What are the thoughts and lives of those who survive the initial devastation in a world where the cold of winter is hot with radiation and even first snowfalls are ashen grey?

  • Nuclear Winter presents the viewpoints of individual nuclear holocaust victims, some adult, some children, in different locations and circumstances, who have survived the first shock of a major nuclear war. The poems are arranged in the order I wrote them between October and December 1985. They reveal a world in the grip of nuclear winter where snow and ice, changed weather patterns and grey clouded skies are made worse by the radioactive refuse of a planetary nuclear battleground.

    My purpose is to alert the reader to the danger of a major nuclear war. I do not believe such a war is likely today, but it is more likely than it was ten or twenty years ago and if something is not done to prevent it, such a war will grow increasingly possible. Read the poems, see the consequences and avert the war.

    (February 1986)

  • T.E. Lawrence wrote that the Arab revolt in the desert was a fight for individual freedom in which morality and the rights of the Arab nation were consumed in the quest for victory. Now, nearly three-quarters of a century later, another fight for Arab freedom from outside interference unfolds the specter of an even more potentially cataclysmic confrontation using the most sinister weapon of the First World War - poison gas - along with the ultimate invention of military destruction, the nuclear bomb. Have we come back to the Garden of Eden to demonstrate that we can now throw ourselves out?

    The emergence of a less bipolar world has not led to the lessening of the threat of nuclear war. Every state capable of forging a nuclear weapon awaits only its own fevered scenario for its use, an attack always couched in defensive terms and consistently at the expense of innocent civilians and, if enough payers can be found, the destruction of humanity.

    There are no poems from the desert because the margin of tolerance for stupidity is too narrow to encompass survivors of a nuclear battlefield. The desert is not so forgiving.

  • “I am thankful for the help and encouragement I received in the publication of this book, from Dick and Ginny Dromgoole, Milton and Martha Bell, and especially from my wife, Lindy.”

    — Dan Mings

  • “These haunting passages by S. Daniel Mings starkly depict the horror of the nuclear catastrophe humans have built for themselves. These disturbing images are reality hopefully never realized.”

    — Richard Turco, co-author TAPPS report on nuclear winter

    “Dr. Mings’s message is without ambiguity.”

    — Bill Moyers, journalist

Dan Mings Dan Mings

Accident

Someone said it was an accident,
    some storage depot fusion bomb
    set off the counter-strike
    we counter-striked against.

I don’t know what caused the war,
    only that it had to come
    with so many careful introductions already made.

Mankind, the Bomb, Bomb, Mankind;
    a few minutes of mutual illumination
    to make it all clear,
    and then the dark, cold and wind
    in which to regret.

—a man
  Adirondack Mountains
  North America

 
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Spring

I saw a pink flower blossom in the dust by the square
     where the tall buildings used to be.
I saw a green weed sprout near where the water seeps
     by the collapsed car tunnel.
Perhaps this long, desolate winter is breaking.
I detected no critical roentgen levels after the last ash fall.

—a girl
  The Alps
  Europe

 
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The Nuclear Family

I dine with my family every day.
We sit at the concrete picnic table by the stone wall in the garden.
They are facing me and I come to join them;
I hardly notice they are their own shadows against the wall.

—a man
  Hokkaido Island
  Asia

 
Shadows of an adult and a child burned into a stone wall beside a concrete picnic table.
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My child is burned ...

My child is burned. 
I tried to shield against the blast heat,
    but it was too late.

—a woman
  Rhodope Mountains
  Europe

 
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Used to Be

There used to be trees and grass and blue sky
    if you went far enough from the city
before the bomb changed all that
    things used to be pretty. 

Now they’re not. The trees
    and flowers and growing things
outside the bubble dome
    didn’t do well. They sort of died.

People have begun to take on
    the same ashen pallor as the
land and sky. People seem subdued
    now that the only green is hydroponic algae.

But I think they are a beautiful light green.

—a woman
  Outback
  Australia

 
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Starlight

Is it safe to look at the stars?
I want to make a wish,
but with the ozone layer gone
is it safe to look at the stars?

–a girl
  Patagonia
  South America

 
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The Wind Howls

I used to love listening to the wind howl
    from the Arctic to Texas and past my window.
Blue Northers we called them
    and the biting cold was a respite
    from the memory of summer heat.

Now I cannot remember summer heat
    or green growing things out in the open.
Blue Northers we call them still
    and the biting cold has no respite.
For the wind that howls past my window month after month
    blows from the south.

—a woman
  Texas Hill Country
  North America

 
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Dan Mings Dan Mings

Halloween

We took the kids to each exit to trick-or-treat,
    our first holiday since it happened.
Groups of parents and kids making prints in the ashfall
    where the bright yellow lights push back the dark.
Only this year, the children don’t need masks.

—a man
  Great Lakes
  North America

 
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Opera

Apocalypse is an opera,
    richly, lavishly orchestrated
    in a nuclear war.
The screams are only singers off-key
    and cast of characters are all 
    phantoms of the opera.

—a man
  Allegheny Mountains
  North America

 
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Bunk

I stare at the bunk above me.
She is asleep there;
Her breathing has finally slowed.
Our first night down here
in the shelter and all the
systems are working O.K.
Air, water, food and books are still available
but I wonder if civilization is over.
Is this shelter all that’s left?
In the end, was Henry Ford right?
Is the end of history above me?
Is history bunk?

—a man
  Ohio Valley
  North America

 
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Dear Santa

Dear Santa, please hurry here.
Our daughter Marie is only four
but her logic is as clear
as midnight broken by the searing light
of the bomb blast.
She's afraid you aren't coming
because the shelter has no chimney,
only an airvent to filter out death.
She smiled a little when we told her
she'd join you in heaven.
But the morphine is almost gone and
she won't be able to smile much longer.

—a woman 
  Puget Sound
  North America

 
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Gulls

The sea stinks most peculiar
    since the wartime began.
Maybe the plankton died
    and the chain reaction spread.
Our beach is ankle deep in
    fishy skeletons. At least the gulls got a feast
    before they skimmed the empty waters and flew away.
Now the fish, the sea and the gulls exist 
    only on the video cassettes of 
    old movies and eco-hysteria films.

—a man
  Sumatra
  Asia

 
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It’s Them

Have you heard it?
Late at night outside the big blast door,
the howls still come through somehow,
Maybe they’re just dogs gone hungry too long
or perhaps wolves, but no.
We know what makes that noise.
It’s them. Those that died outside.
Why do they blame us for living?
My parents tell me it’s only the storm wind,
but I hear the noises call me to come out.
Maybe tonight, when everyone is asleep,
I’ll creep up the tunnel and open the big blast door.

—a girl
  Rocky Mountains
  North America

 
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Shelter

I’m snug and safe in my shelter
but I can’t seem to remember 
if I used the ventilator bonnet
on the bird feeder.

—a man
  Salisbury Plain
  British Isles

 
Below a barren tree there is a manhole in the snow. The hatch is sealed shut.
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Cool Water

I must throw myself into cool water
to ease the pain of my burns.
I didn’t have them at first;
I thought I was O.K.
Now I wish I could die quick
and end the agony to come.
Ahhh - who did this to me?
Why wasn’t I more careful?
Why didn’t I stop them from their stupid war?
There is no God! Oh God, please help me!
Someone carry me outside
where it is cold
and I can sleep.

—a man
  Black Forest
  Europe

 
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Mouse

Each night the mouse creeps across
the shelter floor and watches us.
He’s not hungry or cold because 
he can get into the grain storage compartment.
We can’t.
What is the gestation period for mice?
If he has a mate they will inherit the entire shelter complex
unless I kill him tonight.
Why bother? We are dead in
a few days and no one else will come
after we are gone.
If he’s alone then he’ll die alone too.
But what if the radiation mutates
his heirs and they realize what
we have done?
I am too ashamed to let any other species
know how we have failed our stewardship.

—a man
  Kuban Steppe
  Europe

 
Mouse scampering across the floor.
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Old People Are Selfish

Old people are selfish
    they paw feebly at the food packets with grey inflamed fingers.
Old people are selfish
    why must we share precious food with mumblers?
Old people are selfish
    everybody over thirty should just be stuck outside to die.

—a young man
  New Jersey Pine Barrens
  North America

 
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Norwegian Wood

Once in a 1960’s June,
we hummed and changed a Beatles tune.
Now January frosts and freezes every month.
And Norwegian wood is Birnam come to Dunsinane.
I think I see them falling gently now,
another silver ashfall in the cold moonlight.

—a woman 
  Scottish Highlands 
  British Isles

 
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Slug-a-bed

Today I will feel no pain
of body or mind
because I’m not going to open my eyes
or get out of bed.
I’m the oldest one left in the shelter.
Besides, it’s too cold to move,
outside of my warm blankets.
There are enough for everyone now
that the grown-ups are gone.
I’m the oldest one left in the shelter.

—a boy
  Andes Mountains
  South America

 
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Tenochtitlan is Radioactive

Ehecatl sweeps along the night streets.
No shutters slap shut to avoid him,
no courageous youth waits for him
at the crossroads on the traveler’s bench
under the stars.
He has turned cold and poisonous
despite our blood sacrifice
of an entire planet.

Five billion hearts
held aloft pounding in the silence
And we are no more.

—a man
  Sierra Madre Occidental
  North America

 
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