Poetry |

“Late Work in Early Winter”

Late Work In Early Winter

 

I felled an ash yesterday that dropped

in the stream below the house with a thud

my neighbor heard from across his field where he

was digging postholes for a fence to keep

his cows from getting out again.

“Plenty

of heat in that one,” he said, startling me

from behind after walking over in the din

of my saw to see just what it was

I was doing so close to his land.

“Hello, Ed,”

I said in the quiet of my shut off Stihl.

“Now all I have to do is pull it out

of the stream with my ATV.”

“Yup” he said.

“Looks like that beetle got it

like all the others.

Sometimes I think I feel one

crawling up my shin.”

He’s ninety three

but can still fix almost anything on his farm

without any help, from backing his Massey

Ferguson out of a bog by chaining six foot

logs to its high rear wheels, then

creeping out, to fixing his ancient half ton truck

with parts he’s kept for fifty years because

he knew he’d need them even more down

the road than a brand new truck.

We talked

until it was almost dark and a star

came out in the late December sky.

A breeze

blew in from the north with a chill as we talked

some more about this and that, I can’t remember

now.

“Be well,” he said.

“You too,” I replied,

and then, as he turned around after having

already turned around a couple of times

as if he were lost or had a few more things

to say but thought against it, he exclaimed,

“Will you look at that!”

“What?” I asked, looking up

from the ash.

“That bank of fog heading this way

from across my field.”

“Well, I’ll be damned,” I said

“It’s a holy ghost the way it’s floating there,

the way it just appeared from out of the blue

as a cloud and landed in your field like a para-

chute.

“What a sight!”

But he was gone, out

of range, and I alone again, stood weeping

there in the dark that was falling like a shroud,

as if I were the king of these parts in my crepuscular

gown with the sound of a voice I’d never heard

before calling to me, then not.

 

Contributor
Chard deNiord

Chard deNiord’s most recent poetry collection is In My Unknowing (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2020). He recently retired from teaching at Providence College and was the Poet Laureate of Vermont (2015-19).

Posted in Poetry

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.