Poem of the Month for August

The Hungry Gap-Time -- by Thomas Lux (2008)

 

late August, before the harvest, every one of us worn down

by the plow, the hoe, rake,

and worry over rain.

Chicken coop confiscated

by the rats and the raptors

with nary a mouse to hunt. The corn's too green and hard,

and the larder's down

to dried apples

and double-corned cod. We lie on our backs

and stare at the blue;

our work is done, our bellies flat.

The mold on the wheat killed hardly a sheaf.

The lambs fatten on the grass, our pigs we set

to forage on their own—they'll be back

when they whiff the first shucked ears

of corn. Albert's counting

bushels in his head

to see if there's enough to ask Harriet's father

for her hand. Harriet's father

is thinking about Harriet's mother's bread

pudding. The boys and girls

splash in the creek,

which is low but cold. Soon, soon

there will be food

again, and from what our hands have done

we shall live another year here

by the river

in the valley

above the fault line

beneath the mountain.

 

 

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Thomas Lux (1946 - )

-- Born in Northampton, Massachusetts on Dec. 10, 1946.  Grew up on a dairy farm.

-- Emerson College

-- University of Iowa

-- Holds the Bourne chair in poetry at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

 

 

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