BPR 44 | 2017
Memorial Day weekend,
 the lake is thronged
 with boats and jet skis, 
 memory’s water walkers.
 He’s lost count of the drownings.
*
It’s all down there,
 tobacco fields, the old homeplace,
 cross-cut saws, creek stones
 that marked unnamed graves,
 woodstoves and chicken coops,
spinning wheels and chestnut cradles
 and coffins,
 the old rugged cross
 and all the yellowed almanac hokum.
*
After the first frost,
 he found a hornet’s nest
 latched to a low limb,
 which meant a mild winter.
He brought it in and spent hours
 peeling off the gray whispering layers.
It was a kind of translation,
 unweaving the work
 of so many mouths.
At the core of the nest
 was the comb
 with its tiny pharaohs entombed.
What to do now
 with this pile of paper,
 too delicate to accept
 even the slightest mark? 
 The ancient blank text
 kept mum.
*
The barn was his get-gone.
 Long empty
 and beginning to shed siding,
 it still smelled of harness and hay,
 of long field hours brought in.
 Mud daubers had hung their clay flutes
 just under the eaves.
 Swallow nests tufted the rafters
 and the swallows carved the dusk.
 This was the use of disuse.
 Loft, grain bin and stall
 organized the silent dimness.
 One summer, he found a litter
 of kittens in the manger.
 Five fur blots,
 eyes squeezed shut, wriggling.
 A day or two later
 their limp stillness.
 A tom had neatly slit each throat.
*
Six years old, he went with her
 to decorate the church
 for Christmas, clapboard Baptist,
 sanctuary like a barn.
 Her parents had given the land to the faithful,
 though they had precious little land.
 They had to wait for another woman to come.
 She had the Virginia creeper
 they’d wind around the white candles
 in each sanctuary window.
 They sat in the front pew and waited.
 It was cold and they kept their coats on.
 It was the best sermon he’d ever heard,
 the tall silence of the empty place,
 the smell of talc in her old coat
 and when the grumbling old basement furnace
 finally kicked on, some dust leapt up from the vents
 and danced around the pulpit.
*
After a week’s visit,
 he finds, on the nightstand,
 a mound where his daughter
 peeled her sunburn,
 a small pyramid of skin.
*
He was to be paid
 a penny per thistle.
 He was to keep count.
 The swing blade said, tsk, tsk
 like a frowning grandmother.
 By noon his hands
 were blistered.
 His arms that night
 would remember the swinging blade.
 He lost count sometime
 in the afternoon.
 How many thistles
 could a pasture hold?
 It was a riddle
 from a sphinx.
 The purple blooms
 on the spikey stalks
 were plundered by bees,
 honey for the combs.
*
They troll for a drowning
 with a grappling hook,
 though the body,
 once it bloats, will rise.
 It’s a courtesy Search & Rescue
 does for survivors,
 taking some action for the living.
*
When the power company exec explained
 what they would be paid for the land
 to be under water then left
 in a black Lincoln Continental 
 his father said,
 “I reckon there’s nothing to be done about it,
 just have to live beside it.
 All the old thinking will be underneath.”
 Even his way in words
 would be drowned.
*
The boys on the stand-behind mowers
 glide over the hillside across the cove.
 He doesn’t speak their language.
 They don’t speak his.
 But they know grass.
 They cross-hatch the green
 and glide like a stately procession
 of jackal-headed gods across papyrus.
*
The dam was sealed
 the year he was born.
 “A monument to human
 engineering,” the paper said.
 Sometimes at dusk
 he stands on the bank
 and thinks, “You and me,
 lake, we’re the same age
 and what we have
 we have underneath.”
*
The troll boats are out again,
 dragging their grappling hooks.
 Someone has come up missing.
 That’s the story of our lives, he thinks.
 They’re half throttle
 as they work a grid
 in what has no grid,
 the big cave of the water.
 He wonders if the two drowned rivers
 are still moving, still sliding
 in their beds beneath, water under water.
 Dusk in its shepherd cloak
 is walking out.
 Search & Rescue calls it a day.
 The hooks come up without their man.
 Cicadas sing like the shrill of the depths.
*
There was the store with the screen door,
 the man with three days’ growth of beard,
 always. How did he do that? Never clean-shaven.
 And the fat woman with her pencil stub
 and brown paper bags she totaled up tabs on.
 The oiled wooden floor cried
 for the pacing of this or that,
 what could be done without.
*
Moses in a basket floating
 in the bulrushes.
 What were bulrushes?
 He clipped the picture
 with the safety scissors.
 His Sunday School teacher
 said there weren’t any bulrushes
 in the mountains.
 Everything miraculous
 happened somewhere else.
*
After watching the news at noon
 he goes out to the shop
 to work on the weedeater.
He puts the shaft in the vise
 and starts to tinker.
 The carburetor’s gunky.
He thinks about his shifts at the mill,
 the banked hours he lives on now.
 The shop’s tin roof ticks.
 His daughters live in other states.
 Glass baby food jars of saved nuts and washers
 line the dusty shelves.
*
The bed was one of two strangenesses
 in the house.
 It was an odd contraption,
 too big for the bedroom and chrome-shiny,
 out of place under the stiff, yellowed portraits
 of a man and woman he didn’t know.
 She rested there,
 the bed cranked up part way.
 She was an old queen on her throne,
 eyes shut, with a difficult choice to make.
 His father’s father
 spent the afternoons with his head bowed
 over the Bible or a baseball game
 on the crackling Philco.
 Clouds slid their shadows
 through the windows
 as if great fish passed quietly overhead.
*
“Live beside it.”
 What he’s done for fifty some years.
 On paper he’s wealthy.
 The summer people slide by,
 oiled bodies in pleasure craft,
 gunning of a torqued engine.
 The busy gray nest
 swallows hornets like words
 returning to the mouth.
*
Summer afternoons he read.
 There was nothing else to do.
 Too hot to ride his bike.
 Tales of empires, great kings.
 From the porch
 he watched the old red hay baler
 making its rounds
 in the field behind his grandfather’s
 ruin of a barn.
 His father rented the field
 to a man who raised beef cattle.
 The square bales dropped
 from the baler’s chute.
 The field was being organized
 into neat blocks.
 It’s what we do, he thought,
 arrange the grass, make stacks.
 At the field’s edge
 the rising water shimmered.
*
He thinks it’s barn-light down there,
 the silt swirling like barn dust,
 seeming to climb the shafts of light
 that plunge in from above.
 Of course it’s going nowhere
 and everywhere all at once.
 It’s murky and the sound
 is like the blood
 you hear thrumming in your ears
 when all is very still.
 Then a smallmouth pocks a mayfly
 from the surface and the spell is broken.
 Wavelets work out from the center,
 the bull’s eye widening until it’s gone.



