Shown: posts 1 to 3 of 3. This is the beginning of the thread.
Posted by fayeroe on February 11, 2004, at 7:34:22
—for Brad
Fifteen below and wind at sixty,
no way to get the feeder to the cattle;
they'll have to tough it out or not
till the gusting dies down—
if they weren't the neighbor's herd left
in your care you'd forget them—
no they'd be gone, sold for the pleading
or the settlement, like everything;
you think of cutting the motor off to sit
in the tractor cab awhile, radio songs slowly
fading out as they suck the battery dry,
white nonsense scattering at the windshield
like bits of wreckage hypnotizing
till some kind of sleep comes on—
no sleeping in the house, the bedroom closed,
the kids' rooms too, you only go
to the couch and listen to television voices
calling as if to a lifeboat they don't
know anything about; once in a while the
answering machine—not her, just
your mother or sister, worried, trying to
coax you to the phone, draw you out,
but you're too tired to tell them there's
nothing left here to worry about:
if the gusting doesn't die down soon
the cold will finish all of it.Debra Nystrom is the author, most recently, of Torn Sky.
Posted by Rigby on February 11, 2004, at 10:16:01
In reply to Poetry by Debra Nystrom~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, posted by fayeroe on February 11, 2004, at 7:34:22
nm
Posted by Jai Narayan on February 14, 2004, at 18:56:09
In reply to Poetry by Debra Nystrom~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, posted by fayeroe on February 11, 2004, at 7:34:22
As always your poets are the best. I can feel that angst. The deep sadness of loss.
thank you for this offering.
This is the end of the thread.
Psycho-Babble Writing | Extras | FAQ
Dr. Bob is Robert Hsiung, MD, bob@dr-bob.org
Script revised: February 4, 2008
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/cgi-bin/pb/mget.pl
Copyright 2006-17 Robert Hsiung.
Owned and operated by Dr. Bob LLC and not the University of Chicago.