Poetry |

“Aubade with Elsewhere & All,”

Aubade with Elsewhere & All

 

 

A boy kneels on a dirt floor & empties

                                                                        his pockets — two cat’s eye agates,

a railroad spike, jingle of brass

                                                                        casings levered from his grandfather’s

.22, the smell yet of smoke, faintest

                                                                        blue of powder stains. He creaks open

the toolbox & where once rested

                                                                        implements of order and repair, stows

these artifacts of elsewhere & all

                                                                        that has gone away, stows them

alongside the others — thin bones,

                                                                        mother-of-pearl river shells, a fluted

glass bottle stamped MILWAUKEE,

                                                                        the glossed square of a magazine page,

which, unfolded, reveals Kathy Ireland

                                                                        in a green bikini. With both hands the boy

closes — he nearly trembles — the rust-bitten

                                                                        lid & from the imaginary satchel

hung over his heart lifts an unfailing

                                                                        & invisible lock. The treasures within

thus secured, the boy rises & takes

                                                                        his leave of the homesteader’s shack,

that dank sanctum, which sat slumped

                                                                        in the far corner of the shelterbelt,

a tangled acre of ash & Russian olive

                                                                        planted by some dead ancestor to slow

for a moment the insistent plains wind,

                                                                        which blows now unimpeded, as nothing

remains — not the shack, not a single tree.

                                                                        Only the lock, the key.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

A man steps into the gymnasium for the Saturday night basketball game

 

 

& his sinews pull at his bones

as the wind pulls at the cottonwoods —

as the river eats at the bridge’s moorings —

 

& the bodies of the hunched, hero-dreaming spectators

& the soft, galloping players & the bespectacled referees

are one body, & molecules of herbicide tick

in the alveoli of every blooming lung —

 

the gravel roads lead tonight away from town,

& the ditches dry down,

& the beeves rip the last bunchgrass down to the roots —

 

when my grandfather hauls the banker up by his shirtfront

& in a shower of popcorn & red licorice

tosses him down the bleachers, alive

to all that is honorable & wrong in us.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Locust

 

Nothing came up in the north field.

We haven’t seen rain since April.

The clouds above weigh many tons.

They drift by like sedans on the highway.

My grandfather says there used to be a song like this.

The kind you play on a mouth harp.

Better than a dozen verses.

Half again as many choruses.

No matter how it goes the devil shows up.

He’s like grasshoppers that way.

I keep a glass jar of them on my bedstand.

I like in the night their click & skitter.

I dream a lake as blue as my rifle eye.

If you hook them at the thorax they’ll twitch for hours.

Even with a sinker even at the very bottom.

Contributor
Joe Wilkins

Joe Wilkins’ new novel is The Entire Sky (Little Brown, 2024). His debut novel was Fall Back Down When I Die (Back Bay, 2020). He is also the author of a memoir, The Mountain and the Fathers, and four collections of poetry, including Thieve and When We Were Birds, winner of the Oregon Book Award. Wilkins directs the creative writing program at Linfield University.

Posted in Poetry

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