An on-going draught left bony carp
the year everyone lived
but didn’t know why. Men on the bridge
used dough balls for bait.
Hungry church-folk
walked on rounded rocks,
doubters pinned frowns to somber faces.
Tom broke his trot line.
In August,
when he tried to fix it from a
leaky boat, an old man called him
a “damn fool.” Kids ate tadpoles
from a stagnant pond.
Dragon flies lingered
near its sun-burnt shore.
And “Harry the ’Bo” hummed a song
sung by gandy dancers,
and took his meal in a metal can, as usual,
on the eastern bank of Shoal Creek.
first publsihed in Rearview Quarterly


No comments yet
Comments feed for this article