Psalm for AppalachiaJanice Miller PotterTurning shifts for decades, he left a chair by the doorwhere he tied and untied the broken laces in his boots.The pencil-marked white table hosts his dinner bucketwhose lid should clank it another dent, whose waxedpaper is balled up for the garbage. But he's left that.Damp as dug coal, the night has hauled out hard scrabble.Shirring and bounding, crickets clear weeds and grass.A moth-eaten beam passes over the room and shattersthe table and the ladderback chair, coal-stained as a lung.In the skillet, soot marls the sickly white bacon greaseleft for a supper of fried eggs which never break.Nobody is coming back. Nobody is ever coming back.[from Psalms in Time (Finishing Line Press, 2008)].
Friday, July 10, 2009
Here's a poem from my mother's chapbook.
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2 comments:
How sparsely beautiful,such an appropriate title
Such a sweet comment, Ruth. I've passed it on to my mom.
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