The
corn died first, then
the
soybeans, thirsting for the rain
that
didn’t come. Farmers watched
the
early morning, noon, 5, 6 and 10
o’clock
news knowing that nothing
was
changing except hope.
And
occupying my postage stamp
of
a yard I scurried from grass
to
gardens to trees to grass and
back
again, a perpetual etcetera
of
water and hoses, sprinklers
and
soakers, and constant motion
of
water and hope.
The
red buds died in the boulevards
this
summer, and the Civil War tree
in
the park, three of my rosebushes
but
only one limb of the crabapple.
Hope
endures.
This
poem is submitted to the dVersePoets prompt of the dog days of summer. To see other poems, please visit the site.
10 comments:
It's the same here in Nebraska. Mandatory watering restrictions, too. Yesterday, it rained and no one dodged the drops. We all walked around in it as if the sun were shining, letting it soak in to all the dry. I don't know if it can ever rain long enough...
"Only one limb of the crabapple. Hope endures."
Yes.
Hi- think my comment was saved - but if not go to dVerse and let me know. Really lovely poem. k.
I pray rain comes to you soon. It can be disheartening to see so many things wither and perish, a helpless feeling when little can be done about it. At least one can always be assured of the laws of impermanence and know that "this too shall pass"..eventually..I hope sooner than later.
'The red buds died in the boulevards': lovely line, Glynn.
just read today that our bread here in germany will become more expensive because of the dryness in the states... it's a chain reaction.. glad that you ended on a hopeful note
Hope endures: this sums it up all. Prices rose here too this year, the monsoons were late.
a sea of heat
wave after wave
moving across the land
searing
scorching
long tongue of dogs
cats under porches
clothes hanging dry
it turns
week after week
life into death
hard earth
hard times
solid
enduring hope
hope does endure...those that make it through the hard hot tests....some dont and never will...
The summer when no one heard the corn moan in its growing ...
excellent poem!
Post a Comment