Touching
Dawn Potter
at school is against the rules,
so when a spike-haired
first grader in need
butts up against your hip,
don’t you wrap your arms
round his skinny bones, don’t you
cup his skull in your palms,
smooth a knuckle up his baby cheek:
he’s got lice, he’s got AIDS;
you kiss him, you die,
or worse: late nights, he’ll hunch up small,
stare into some laugh show
and whisper what no half-pissed dad
cares to hear from his wife’s
kid at the end of a long day
of nothing, when sleep
is the only country,
anywhere else, terror:
a father you’ve marked
before, slouching into parent night,
two hands trembling
along his thighs like birds
shot down,
black eyes wary as a bull’s:
he blinks at the butcher,
you smile, you fold
your unheld hands;
what roils in his wake is the one
you won’t teach
to beg an answer from love.
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.
3 comments:
Powerful post, and poetry.
One of my daughter's friends ended up dropping out, pregnant, getting married and now, a mother, back in school, finishing what she'd begun.
Sometimes, all we can do is smile when we see them and let them know -- I see you.
IN that seeing there is hope.
There are so many wonderful poems in your collection; these two, in particular, because they describe scenes that unfold all over America. I find them both very moving.
Everything matters forever and always. We get to know this. What we don't get to know is what it would've been like without us. So, it has to be pure faith that propels us.
A few precious times I have been told that what I did so long ago meant so much. Startling, at the time it was just what had to be done.
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