February 26, 2001 -- POW Log Out | Topics | Search
Moderators | Register | Edit Profile

Wild Poetry Forum » ~WPF Administration & Moderator Testing Forum~ » February 26, 2001 -- POW « Previous Next »

Author Message
M
Board Administrator
Username: mjm

Post Number: 4668
Registered: 11-1998
Posted on Saturday, July 23, 2005 - 5:20 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Poem of the Week
When Does the First Train Leave for Atlanta?
Gary Blankenship


red dirt or yellow clay
did not clog our lives
or ruin the wash
in ‘49

our world was colored gray
and stained brown
from granite gravel
and Cascade mud
3000 miles
from the red hills of Georgia

too few years gone by
too many blowouts ‘long the way
for Grandpa to quit
fighting long-dead feuds
with cheap whiskey
and bad beer

too few curves and passes
too many cold nights
and hot days hoeing beans
for Grandma to accept
his fight was real as her 16 babies
and not an old drunk’s raves

In our town in 1949, there were no what we now lump together as minorities. No coloreds, Indians, or Mexicans. No one with a name that ended in vowels or started with Gold. There were Catholics, but mostly they were German. Smedley’s Pass was white folk on the road to nowhere and not in any hurry to get there. Farmers and loggers and a few veterans trying to forget the war.

in ‘49
they sent Dot to the sanitarium
Buddy drowned in Willow Lake
Carl lost his arm in a mill accident
Henry screamed in his sleep about killing Japs
Alice lost a boy-baby
Frank packed up his family and moved to San Diego

Grandpa swore at Grandma
for not getting the red and yellow mud
cleaned off his boots
that he couldn’t take Livie
to the dance looking like no hick hill farmer
mud on his boots

Grandma prayed
for the crazy old man to die
prayed for the Lord God Jesus
to forgive her
for those evil thoughts
for sins past and yet to come
in ‘49

I was seven years old and lived with my grandparents. Within a half day’s walk lived three uncles, two aunts, and several grown cousins. I spent a fair amount of time hiking to their houses and sleeping under the stars, listening to coyotes and hoot owls. Henry, unmarried, lived with us. Dorothy had been until she got the TB.

white trash
not quite
there were too many war heroes
dairy farmers
and logging truck drivers
in the family to be considered white trash

and by marriage
a bookkeeper
a forest ranger
the owner of the Smedley’s Pass Café
and the best auto mechanic in town

and we weren’t okies or arkies
just Georgia clay
which had birthed Cascade mud
for sixty-odd years

but we were close

In 1949, I found out how close. Sundays, the women and a few of the older men went to church, babies and the girl-children in tow. Us boys would have to go unless we could find an excuse, like helping Uncle Willie with haying or Aunt Hilda’s husband fix his bulldozer. This Sunday, I had to help Grandpa and Henry find the Jersey milker, who had wandered into the woods to calf.

the west woods
nettles and thistle
blackberry and blackcap
at the edges
hemlock
oregon grape
scrub alder and hazelnut
inside

(Grandpa carried a flask
Henry the shotgun in case bears caught the Jersey’s scent
I’d snuck a few cookies from the cupboard)

brambles
from one end to the other
where giant fir once towered
by the creek
skunk cabbage
salmonberry
devils club

(she would head to the water
always did
I, small enough to get under the brush
would be the first to find her
always was)

to my left
Grandpa and Henry
sought an easier path
followed a deer trail
to the creek
to my left
I heard them arguing

(I could see Grandpa
pulling on the flask
could see Henry’s grip
tighten
could hear…)

In 1949, towns as small as Smedley’s Pass were as stratified as any Hindu city. Families as large as ours were even more so. Mabel, married to the café and Paula to the bookkeeper, thought they were better than Sally with her father’s disease or Olive married to a gypsy logger. Unwed mothers and bastard children at the bottom of the family heap.

you shiftless sum-bitch
milkin’ battle fatigue
stress my ass
you’re just a lazy bastard


old man shut your filthy mouth
you don’t be calling me no bastard
you don’t be talking that way about mama

you don’t know nothing
you stupid kid
you think I don’t know the bitch
was humping with my brother
why do you think I waited for him
on the jacksonville road
and why do you think he’s buried
in red and yellow clay
‘stead of brown mud


SHUT UP YOU OLD SON OF BITCH
SHUT UP BEFORE I

(I could see Henry’s fingers on the trigger
I could see Grandpa reach for the shotgun,
I could see the jersey breech-birthing by the creek
when I heard…)

you as much a bastard as that sissy boy of Clara’s

In 1949, I now understood why the kids at school whispered behind my back, and why I’d best stay away from some of the older kids. I understood that the difference between an Okie and a drunk Georgia redneck was far less than the 60 years that separated them when they first stepped into brown
Cascade mud.

in ‘49
they buried Henry in the valley plot
Grandma went to live with Mabel
her world confined to broadcasts
of the Reverend Jimmy Tomlison
of the Church of Living Fires
of Atlanta Georgia

and I with Olive

in ‘49
Grandpa sat on the porch
of the house where his children were birthed
and watched Henry and the Jersey die
until he could not tell which was which

in ‘51
Dorothy was buried next to Henry
I caught rheumatic fever
and Mother came home for Dorothy’s funeral
married to another Hank from over Bartown way

Add Your Message Here
Post:
Bold text Italics Underline Create a hyperlink Insert a clipart image

Username: Posting Information:
This is a private posting area. Only registered users and moderators may post messages here.
Password:
Options: Enable HTML code in message
Automatically activate URLs in message
Action: