BPR 50 | 2023
The right subject for long study,
 this thirty-inch, fourteen-pounder:
 curved end called the swan’s neck,
 angular other end a chisel,
 intermediate long shank
 between them hexagonal and holy.
 Black like the brilliant raven.
 Beautiful magnifier of muscle,
 the magnitude of its leverage
 and loosening, prise bar basher,
 hooker of and hanger-on of all
 that hooked and hung upon might be.
 Shakespeare called it an iron crow.
 But it’s the dog hit by a car
 that comes back to me every time
 my hand or eye lights on one.
 The seven of us watched
 from the flatbed deck while Lucy Doolin
 took the bar from the tool rack
 and put the screaming dog down
 with a single blow then lifted gently
 its body into the bed with us.
 This was our summer job,
 a trip a day to the dump with litter.
 Lucy snuffed a cigarette in a ribbon
 of blood, lit another, and hung the crowbar
 back on the rack. He might have looked
 at us then, but either we were all
 or only I was looking at the dog.
 Then Lucy spoke to the air wherever
 we were: choice, he said, the will
 of God or whatever, but also the tool
 at hand, the right tool for the job.
