things that made Us laugh and stories by The hour Waking up the story buds Like fruit. Who walked among the flowers And brought them inside the house And smelled as good as they And looked as bright. Who made dresses, braided Hair. Moved chairs about Hung things from walls Ordered baths Frowned on wasp bites And seemed to know the endings Of all the tales I had forgot. WHO OFF INTO THE UNIVERSITY Went exploring To London and To Rotterdam Prague and to Liberia Bringing back the news to us Who knew none of it But followed crops and weather funerals and Methodist Homecoming; easter speeches, groaning church. WHO FOUND ANOTHER WORLD Another life With gentlefolk Far less trusting And moved and moved and changed Her name And sounded precise When she spoke And frowned away Our sloppishness. WHO SAW US SILENT Cursed with fear A love burning Inexpressible And sent me money not for me But for “College.” Who saw me grow through letters The words misspelled But not The longing Stretching Growth The tied and twisting Tongue Feet no longer bare Skin no longer burnt against The cotton. WHO BECAME SOMEONE OVERHEAD A light A thousand watts Bright and also blinding And saw my brothers cloddish And me destined to be Wayward My mother remote My father A wearisome farmer With heartbreaking Nails. I OR MY SISTER MOLLY WHO IN THE FIFTIES Found much Unbearable Who walked where few had Understood And sensed our Groping after light And saw some extinguished And no doubt mourned. FOR MY SISTER MOLLY WHO IN THE FIFTIES Left us.
Eagle Rock In the town where I was born There is a mound Some eight feet high That from the ground Seems piled up stones In Georgia Insignificant. But from above The lookout tower Floor An eagle widespread In solid gravel Stone Takes shape Below; The Cherokees raised it Long ago Before westward journeys In the snow Before the National Policy slew Long before Columbus knew. I used to stop and Linger there Within the cleanswept tower stair Rock Eagle pinesounds Rush of stillness Lifting up my hair. Pinned to the earth The eagle endures The Cherokees are gone The people come on tours. And on surrounding National Forest lakes the air rings With cries The silenced make. Wearing cameras They never hear But relive their victory Every year And take it home With them. Young Future Farmers As paleface warriors Grub Live off the land Pretend Indian, therefore Man, Can envision a lake But never a flood On earth So cleanly scrubbed Of blood: They come before the rock Jolly conquerers. They do not know the rock They love Lives and is bound To bide its time To wrap its stony wings Around The innocent eager 4-H Club.
Baptism They dunked me in the creek; a tiny brooklet. Muddy, gooey with rotting leaves, a greenish mold floating; definable. For love it was. For love of God at seven. All in white. With God’s mud ruining my snowy socks and his bullfrog spoors gluing up my face.
J, My Good Friend (another foolish innocent) It is too easy not to like Jesus, It worries greatness To an early grave Without any inkling Of what is wise. So when I am old, And so foolish with pain No one who knows me Can tell from which Senility or fancy I deign to speak, I may sing In my cracked and ugly voice Of Jesus my good Friend; Just as the old women In my home town Do now.
View from Rosehill Cemetery: Vicksburg for Aaron Henry Here we have watched ten thousand seasons come and go. And unmarked graves atangled in the brush turn our own legs to trees vertical forever between earth and sun. Here we are not quick to disavow the pull of field and wood and stream; we are not quick to turn upon our dreams.
Revolutionary Petunias for June and Julius
Beauty, no doubt, does not make revolutions. But a