The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by J.T. Ledbetter
Summer Tomatoes
At the River View Home they gave him a room with another man who snored and told lies about the war and would not let my father read by his little light at night, but during the big storm, when all the lights were out in the dining room, the man cried and wheeled himself in circles.
The last room they gave him before he died had a small balcony where he could have a tomato plant, so we put one in a pot and watched him bend over it, holding it up, smelling the pungent leaves. “One tomato, can you believe that? On the farm we had hundreds. Have you ever tasted summer tomatoes?” When we drove back to Colorado to bury him I picked up his favorite blue work shirt and held it to my face, smelling the sharp smell of tomato vines, remembering the farm where he showed me how to work the ground and when to plant and water as we kicked our shovels into the hard Illinois ground. “Wait until you taste summer tomatoes,” he said.
two boys find a horse while gigging fish in Turley’s Marsh
it was lying in lead-white quick lime head and neck were there the rest was gone
sockets where eyes had been flared nostrils like it was holding its breath
you can find it in the field of yellow-headed daisies my mom calls them
you’ll smell ripe plums
Farm Dreams
He wants to tell her he dreamed she was milking the cow, and how the seasons seemed to move around her, colors and weathers swirling in the barn as she leaned her head against the cow’s warm stomach, and then she was upstairs in bed, and in his dream he touched her body beneath the cold sheets but she slept long and deep and would not wake to his hands.
She watches him drink his hot tea from the saucer and wants to tell him she dreamed he plowed the garden, blindfolded, the reins tying him to the plow, and when she ran to him the horse bolted, turning the plow over and how he flailed blindly at the horse, cursing and crying, crawling in the damp furrows.
At night they sit in the yellow glow of light in the kitchen where words might come, but words do not come so they pull on heavy boots, their fingers touching crossing laces, their clothes billowing out as they cross the porch to the barn, noticing the old horse leaning against the silo, the mother cat carrying her kittens into the corn crib, the lone duck in the horse tank and the moon overflowing the bird bath.
They notice these things, but the farm and poor crops and bad weather have given them no words for what they mean, anymore than they have for dreams or the coming snow or the cold night that surrounds them in their bed where their sock feet touch, their breath a blue mist in the cold room. They notice such things, and
mean to talk about them someday, but they wonder if they would still be able to
clear the upper pasture or cap the old well in Turley’s
Woods or hold the cow's
head while the other pulls the dead calf out. And which words could they use after the flood carries off the new pigs and Rev. Nobs takes his life in the belfry, neighbors asking them if they knew that woman from Galena.
But these questions do not last as the first snow swirls about them as they dig up rotten potatoes, and listen to the wind coming through the attic window he meant to fix, or why she cried in her apron after dropping her mother’s dish,—watching him watch her in the dark kitchen where he waits for his dinner. What words then? Or now?
when you say good-by
when you say good-by the eye having seen enough of the world shuts leaving the sun balanced on the horizon the familiar face turning away
the hand having touched bone and nerve recoils as the needle unstitches the skin levering the splinter out
and the heart no louder than the thrush hiding in the fox’s shadow stops as the candle goes out a wisp of smoke upon the water
snow
was not expected but neither was the baby or the tax man somehow all three came at once and the weather man said more coming
down the block a woman pulls a kid’s wagon her life covered by a tarp taken off a dead horse she found in a pasture ground hogs root for sprigs of anything moose spraddle their legs to get at the salt-lick
cars slide and crash people curse and sing carols children will wake up to snow on their window sill their parents woke earlier to finish the tree they cut down after they burned the first one for heat
over the line in Idaho two men hunt along the Coeur d’Alene river their camies red with blood and whiskey dogs slide on the ice chewing on what may have been a red-tailed fox in happier times
someone driving in the Palouse stops for a look at his tires they will find him next month
snow falls lightly in footsteps that go from house to barn filling them like cream the man watches it come down from the barn where he milks the one cow he had from his father when he married Sue Notts after she got back from a country he cannot find on a map her medals are in her sock drawer
the Monroe Street Bridge in Spokane is covered with snow cars are spinning crossways avoiding children on new sleds while a man with no sleds watches from a burning barrel his medals still in country
it is night the snow is still falling becoming flowers in a milk-white vase Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |