September
Song
Somewhere between the man I’ve become
and the poet I have not, my life moves on.
Where my self is is another question.
Maybe out back in the yard too wild to tame
with my one good arm.
Or in cottonwood shadows
flung across the lawn I have yet to mow. Yes, winter
is on its way. We
cover tomatoes and hope
Indian summer will let green ripen into red
and allow the last two ears of corn to find
our table before raccoons finish off the patch.
Both our streams are man made. They run from May 15
until October when the water-master turns
them off and fish gape in pools left behind. My neighbor
tries to catch them on his one day off. I retired
and no longer fret about things like that. A friend
ten years younger than I would like to leave this world
and join his wife, but can’t seem to find the right
path out. All our
older friends are gone.
The poets who taught me how to make these lines
passed on where rivers run west, not north like those
in their poems. They
took sea lanes out or hid beneath
the ice when I asked about the farm. Telephone lines
gave way to wireless. The birds who listened to their rhymes
flew south except for mottled finches in full molt
who wait for tails to grow back in to guide them home.
—Donnell
Hunter
14 September 2012
No comments:
Post a Comment