time a neighbor-farmer
thought out loud I might be funny,
so dad put me to work
with the hogs and I watched
from the trees as he called for me
through outbuildings and barn,
his anger on my name.
Built anxious, I feared legion
in the swine, spooked at the sound
of shades on the stair,
had not yet learned to thrill
in becoming stranger, more
distant from myself.
Record of Persons Whose Names Have Changed
From an exhibit of eighteenth-century documents at the public library, Chelmsford, Mass.
All is vanity. The man who changed Bumside
to Burnside, afraid of himself, the protuberance of it,
hanging there for whoever
might use it to demean him or make dirty. In such cases,
the rubbed-out letters
shelter and shield, Lorenzo
rechristened Larry, in the daybreak
of state function:
Be it enacted, &c., as follows . . .
The magic is immediate. The new name a sandpaper
smoothing away bumps
and unsightly knobs—a flatline of your former self.
For others, before and after pictures
show no perceptible change, no clearing away of trees
or rocks from the rich, black soil. As in the case
of Micajah, who strangely
insisted on Morrill. What neighbor haunted him?
What hope of safety? What millstone
kept him just out of reach of the surface, that intoxication
of air that comes
from standing aloof, unknown, amid the rabble?
With My Father, Cutting Pigs
Finally I learn to hold, raise
the small one
head-down, hock-spread,
to stretch flat the skin,
my hands raw around
the bristled hooves.
Bending low, my father
makes two quick cuts, kneads
the skin to surface them.
With enough practice I turn
the pig quick so my father
can scissor the tail.
As the squealing fades
into a burst of grunts,
I hold out to him the next.
When Matt’s Dad Lost His Hand
We comforted Matt on the school bus—Does he have a fake one now?
Then somebody made fun of Bunny Lip, aka Leon
Stinks, aka Stutter Step, and he boxed wild as the bus
turned from blacktop roads to gravel, past scraping
harvesters, the eaten fields, dropping us off one by one. We trudged
the lane to the house, heads bowed looking for rocks
to throw at sparrows on the fence line. Everything tensed
when we appeared, angered by hunger, lowing with milk.
Menagerie Wish List
If I could, I would buy an exotic live animal for every room of the house. Two lion cubs in the bedroom as the emblem of innocent risk-taking. A giraffe in the foyer drawing the eye upward to our gorgeous cathedral ceilings. Maybe a gorilla with thumbs to help in the kitchen. In the bathroom, with its tropical steam and rot, a parrot for my feathered mirror. If we had an attached garage, I could go for a monkey—one of those cotton-top tamarins we saw at the Museum of Science (they looked like little old men, gymnastic and wise). For the kids’ rooms who knows, since they are animals still. The small one continues to take food from my hand, and none of them is entirely self-grooming. Though I keep purchasing their food, already it’s plain I won’t be their master for long.
Frankenthumb
Let the mind spin with the baby-faced
farm kid who grabbed
the spell-casting
spinning of the tractor as it drilled
the PTO shaft powering the auger-belt
that floated the fresh-baled straw
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