Ode to an Old Cart
By sanexpeditus
- 2960 reads
One wheel
is all that’s left now,
a twelve-pinned family of wood
around an empty iron heart,
thick spokes,
silenced,
by an axle resting among other
retired machinery bits, no cart
to spin the yarn of a lane
into wood that
rotated
the
potatoes
home.
I remember
that clear October night
when the window at my bed held
a moment of the horse cart on its heels
amid the open drills of turnips, two arms
reaching into a star-studded sky that held
wishes for the quiet yearnings of
laboured things; I prayed for
the horse,
his yoke
and their bond
inside the paternity of my father’s hands.
And how I recall
the tomfoolery of the man
who donned the collar and drew cart and children
around the garden; huge arms filled with
shafts
still
warm
from the sides of a heavy-boned
trot and the sound of laughter.
But
wheel and memories
were laid to rest,
many a year before he,
the grasses holding it
in a slanted embrace to
the crumbling of a barn wall,
worn-out friends interred in dappled sunlight.
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Comments
Very good. I like this a
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This is fabulous and
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I had to come back and show
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Great to see you on here, my
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Excellent. You had me at
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Great piece, Sanexpeditus, I
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