The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Terry Savoie
Heartland
The common day and night—the common earth and waters, Your farm—your work, trade, occupation, The democratic wisdom underneath, like solid ground for all. —W. Whitman
Our sun slips into a late-evening rendition of its dusky-plum self as it prepares itself to give off one parting, pit-sour gasp, tart to be certain, yet still resolutely generous as it settles on the fields of dried, rattling corn stubble that range, acre after acre across our quilt-block township. I linger a moment to give a fond salute to all that stubbornly remains blanketing this land, what lies above the purl & flow of Mud Creek, worn down but holding fast to its side-winding, bull-snake, meandering way between knobs & low-rising hills, its watery fugue making soft, pebbling notes for background music as small creeks prefer to do, working stubbornly back to its Mother Mississippi except for the cutbank pools that school boys seined throughout those last sultry August afternoons, praying to finally fish them clean before summer vacation came to an end. Here I give my evening’s farewell to a spindly cottonwood clutching the creek’s bank & my nod goes out for the full congress of bullfrogs, that coarse crow’s-note in the distance & for the few, white-bellied bullheads that somehow do persist, hidden in the creek bottom below. I sing out a Good-night for you too, intrepid blue heron, standing as is your custom each evening at sunset on your reed-thin pegs, you who’ve managed to return to this spot year in & year out to taste once more this Midwestern claim on paradise. Here’s my so long note going out for those scuttling muskrats who’ve multiplied beyond reason & how can I forget that red fox I recently spotted running for his monk’s cell hidden off above the creek’s crest, a mother out late chasing down her life’s singular mission of survival. Last of all, let me send forward a fare-thee-well to all who’ll never have the fortune to linger here a moment & breathe in, if only briefly, the grace of this Heartland. The evening & I spread our arms wide & wait for the stars to greet us. These are moments we are not meant to understand as life’s thin stream flattens out to flow on, picking up silt & power toward some distant far away.Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |