Idyl
Dawn Potter
What we have is a leaky shower,
and Tom is lying in it, caulking the drain.
It takes guts to be handy—
guts, and a tolerance for misery.
Meanwhile, I sweep crumbs and boil spaghetti
and wash spinach and picture my high school
report card droning its dot-matrix platitude:
“ :: has :: flare :: for :: the :: subject :: ”
He does.
But if I had a bathtub instead of a leaky shower,
there’d be no need for flare. The wet book in my hands
would be Villette or maybe Faust,
and all of the water would go straight down the drain,
just like in the movies.
O, for a lightbulb, for hot and cold water and oil in the tank.
We live in a time of miracles,
when the food doesn’t rot, unless we ask it to.
Dear handyman, so carefully not letting the cat lick caulk,
I empty this sloshing pail in your honor.
[first published in On the Seawall; forthcoming in Calendar]
No comments:
Post a Comment