The Master
Dawn Potter
Leo’s eleven, but he still can’t write “Leo.”
He throws a pencil at me.
“You write the poem,” he says.
He frowns and leans back in his chair
and shuts his eyes.
In the flat autumn light, his glasses
shed a watery glow. His freckles tremble.
Leo always likes to keep me waiting.
After a minute he growls,
“Big heifers in the corn again,
And them horses
Is hungry.”
After a minute he snarls,
“Coyote snitched the rawhide.
Grab a gun and blast him,
Then skin him up.”
Twenty other kids breathe hard,
scribble, and erase. Danyell chews
on the end of a pen and sighs gustily.
“Can I make this up?” she complains.
Leo slouches and crosses his arms
over his bony ribs. He opens his eyes
and smiles in a superior manner.
In his view, imagination sucks.
What matters in a poem
is you tell it like it happened
but you leave out the crap.
He jerks his chin up,
looks me over, slitty-eyed. He says,
“I do something I do it right!”
When that bell screams,
he’s number one out the door.
[forthcoming in How the Crimes Happened (CavanKerry Press, 2010)].
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
School starts tomorrow for my 6th grader, Friday for my 10th grader. Summer winds to an end. There is a chill in the air this morning, and my thoughts are turning to firewood. Outside a mourning dove is wailing its dull wail, a pileated woodpecker is laughing its loon-laugh. I should get dressed and go feed the barn animals, but I'm idling here still, thinking about the first day of school and how I can exactly remember the tremble in my gut on those first-day mornings: walking in jittery circles in the street sand; staring self-consciously and with some anxiety at my new shoes, as the school bus choked around the corner.
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2 comments:
Generally speaking, I'm with Leo in the penultimate stanza!!!!
Yes, Leo has a lot going for him.
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