BPR 47 | 2020
That was a time I may have dreamed or may 
have lived, the one with birds and hyacinths, 
quilts with whole lives in them. I remember 
my grandmother making cutwork linens, fig preserves, 
soups, and cornbread—the encompassing tasks 
to which such women were tethered. I still have 
the impossible size-three, pearl-trimmed slippers 
in which she weathered her wedding.
I can almost want that slow succession of days, rows 
of sealed jars in the pantry filled with tomatoes, 
okra, peas, dewberry jam—the whole summer saved. 
Later the smokehouse would hold November’s 
slaughter: hams, sausage, bacon sweetening 
in the fire’s breath.
In that county, the children 
who made it to the age of five would live, 
sturdy replicas of their parents sent out 
into our world’s incessant wars. The lost ones beneath stone lambs or perishing 
wooden crosses were seen to be God’s will, 
cause of a harsh but guiltless grief.
My first real playmate was black and exactly 
my age. Her family’s house sat in a pine copse 
in our pasture. Mae Willie and me—we grew wild 
together among field flowers and pecan trees. 
We’d climb the chinaberry and jump, chase 
the hens to frenzy, tease the goat. 
Then we’d swim in air, flat on our stomachs 
in the plank seat of the two-rope swing, 
watching the sun set over a garden 
alight with corn and melons.
Sometimes we walked the train tracks below the farm, 
balancing parallel with our arms held out. 
I think we believed we were on the same journey, 
one probably lifted from a Saturday matinee 
we both saw at the one movie house, though never 
allowed to sit together in the seeing.
Now is new weather beside the rising rivers, 
an oppressive rainless air, or flood, or fire— 
and few animals but ourselves, still making wars. 
There are still children on the ancient tracks 
unable to look back or turn their sight 
from the oncoming, blinding forward light.



