IN THE FAR NORTH OF NEW
HAMPSHIRE
You’ve been more like oxen
than man,
yoked to the same fifty
acres
for fifty-five years,
twelve hours a day,
seven days a week,
ten years of school
but a lifetime of schooling,
making the stony soil pay.
In the saddle of the tractor
or down in your dirt,
through drought and
blizzard,
floods and cancers
on the back of your hand,
you've carved out a living
on land more fit
for growing rocks than
crops.
Your wife's dead.
Your kids work in the city.
You're the last generation
to plant and harvest,
bend your back to the point
of breaking,
day after day,
season after season.
When you go,
most likely
this land goes back to
nature.
Just not human nature.
THE MIST IS
A thoughtless haze,
interested only in itself,
with a sun perched on
its upper edge.
It rises like a watery scarp,
from pond, sea
and woodland shadow.
Not content to sink cottages
in cloud-beds,
it reduces traffic
to pale, yellow eyes
peering out of and into
the vapours.
And men
to their own grimness,
exiles from the light,
struggling to find their way forward.
The mist has no love
for details.
And no foe greater
than the hand in front of my face.
HER PHYSICAL WORLD
She got up in the morning,
looked in the mirror,
swore to herself
that wrinkle
beneath her left eye
wasn’t there the night before –
misquoting Donne,
any new blemish diminishes me.
She scowled, felt aggrieved,
angry at her body
for adhering too closely
to the rules of time,
as if her face wasn’t aware
of all those wonder creams
she’d rubbed into its pores.
She wanted to cry
but that would only accentuate
that traitorous line
in her flesh.
Pale, it was bad enough
but red
and it would shine
like her drunkard husband’s nose.
She made a vow
never to look into mirrors again,
to believe only what
her insides were telling her.
Unfortunately, they were
in town crier mode,
declaring her another day older
and with a brand new wrinkle to match.
But then the room lit up a little
as sun broke through a cloud.
It hadn’t been a wrinkle at all,
merely a trick of shadow.
She felt no better.
What was a shadow
if not a foreshadowing.
THE CHILD I USED TO BE
As a child, each morning began
as if the world was beginning,
new sights, new sounds,
new colours, new people.
The sky was different, the clouds
assembled into shapes I’d never
seen before, and the dog, though
obsessed with his routines, was
always willing to try a different trick,
at my suggestion or his own volition.
School may have been another name
for repetition but if I listened closely
the lessons moved in a direction slightly
outside the range of what I knew already,
and there were maps and words
that triggered daydreams,
and always recess,
other kids doing other things,
all a novelty that I needed to pick up on.
My play was when I separated
in two, teacher and student, one telling
the other that the fence was easily
surmountable while the other did
the climbing, or downplaying the
danger of the lizard that his underling
bent down to pick up by the tail.
Even night, despite its removal
of all outside details, merely confirmed
the fact that a boy, on his own,
in his bedroom, was in close company
with sensations, thoughts, imaginings,
all strange, unique, advancing my cause
in tiny increments or giant leaps,
so that, no matter the moment,
I was never the same as in the one
preceding.
Those were dynamic time.
Blink and you’d have missed
the child I used to be.
THE WAIT
My impatience
is as dull
as the face of a servant.
No wonder.
I am in service to it.
Especially when you are expected.
It no longer champs
with indignation,
merely repeats in a monotone,
“Why is she never on time?”
My restlessness wants me
happy and unconcerned,
willing to wait
for as long as it takes.
It also says,
you’re not worth
getting annoyed over.
So, my impatience
has moved to a neighbourhood bar,
sits patiently
while the bartender serves the party
who arrived before me.
If, when you
finally show,
you want to know
where to find me,
I’ll be with my impatience
at Barry’s on Main Street.
My indifference
will have joined me by then.
John Grey is an
Australian poet, US resident, recently published in Stand, Washington Square
Review and Rathalla Review. Latest books, “Covert” “Memory Outside The Head”
and “Guest Of Myself” are available through Amazon. Work
upcoming in the McNeese Review, Santa Fe Literary Review and Open Ceilings.
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