Poetry |

“The Nominalism of Childhood”

The Nominalism of Childhood

 

“Entities are not to be multiplied beyond necessity.”

— William Ockham

 

I’m sitting on a tractor inside

a barn, studying the dials,

smelling the oil. I’m raised up

on my father’s lap, turning

the key, backing out.

I’m seeing the tractor as less

of a whole than a vast particular   

that I recall in every detail:

the black high wheels

on either side of the metal

seat, the holes in the seat,

the L shaped clutch I cannot

reach, the long steel stick

that changes gears, my father’s

hands on top of mine

around the wheel. I’m driving

down a road that’s no

longer there into an orchard

that’s overgrown. I’m turning

on the lights to see the farm

that disappeared yet still

exists in the yellow beams

of the vintage Ford.

 

Contributor
Chard deNiord

Chard deNiord’s most recent poetry collection is In My Unknowing (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2020). He recently retired from teaching at Providence College and was the Poet Laureate of Vermont (2015-19).

Posted in Poetry

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