Monday, March 19, 2012

The Sowing, The Reaping


There’s something about spring that urges me to
forget all the grudges we’ve swept under our marital
blanket of snow.  You’d say we shouldn’t bury the seeds—
weeds grow where they’re least looked for; like Jason

the farmer, we’ll only reap what we sow.  But unbounded from
the four walls of home, the threat of fully-armed anger has
less importance to me than the horses nickering in the paddocks. 
The stones wreathing the fields like dinner rolls.

It’s a small thing, the newly-turned earth, yet somehow, still
living, we’re reborn from it: The wheat that pushes through
itself to become itself again.  Maybe we should send our dirt on
the wind.  Take it out with the rugs, beat it into the haze that
rises above the tractor and watch it float away over the hill.

2 comments:

  1. Well you know I love this setting. Shorter for you, but it's working. The cycle of life/rebirth aspect is handled well. The last line of the first stanza with its break is masterfully done.

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  2. the threat of fully-armed anger holds

    less importance to me than the horses . insert "holds"?

    I think the shorter poems work as a necessary counterpoint to the long ones.

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