Poetry |

“Grandsons alongside, Grandfather trundles …,” “Those children hop …” & “Skipping to school …”

Grandsons alongside, Grandfather trundles

his pickup across the

dusty field and stops

 

just short of that

creek bed, dried and

widened to a beach.

 

He pulls up a

strand of buried barbed

wire as the boys

 

inspect fallen fence posts.

The younger finds one

suitable for whacking.  With

 

a hard tree limb,

he begins.  Soon his

brother joins in.  Whacking,

 

shouting, whacking.  Until, surrounding

those two, a ghost

comes into focus  —  yellowjacket

 

                 swarm.

 

 

◆     ◆     ◆     ◆

 

 

Those children hop.  Hop

down the back steps.

Hop around the yard.

Which is enclosed; but,

nonetheless.  Neighbors across the

 

way sip martinis, relish

that spectacle, particularly when

the children hop off

their siblings’ backs.  “I’ll

bet they learned that

 

from goats.”  “Or from

their parents.”  “They don’t

hop.”  “But they both

teach.”  “Think those kids’ll

ever walk upright?”  “Hope

 

    not.”  Gin.  Chortles.

 

 

◆     ◆     ◆     ◆

 

 

Skipping to school.  Skipping

school.  Skipping stones across

 

water.  Skipping stones altogether.

One can skip a

 

stone along dry, packed

earth, as does this

 

child.  The stone skips

until it glances off

 

a small root, rises,

and smacks that other

 

truant’s forehead.  The dented

little skull gushes blood

 

as she thumps to

ground.  Two children on

 

opposite sides of that

path, with one moment

 

frozen between them, a

moment that can’t be

 

skipped over.  Get up,

Annie.  Maybe let’s go

 

back to school.  Just

get up, now.  Those

 

words skip, scatter over

 

      the forest floor.

Contributor
Joel Chace

Joel Chace has published work in print and electronic magazines such as Lana Turner, Survision, Eratio, OtolithsWord For/Word, Golden Handcuffs Review, New American Writing, and The Brooklyn Rail. His new poetry collection is Underrated Provinces (MadHat). Bone Chapel is coming out soon from Chax. For more than 40 years, Chace was a working jazz pianist. He is an NEH Fellow.

Posted in Poetry

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