Appetite, by Rynn Williams (1961-2009)
Appetite, by Rynn Williams (1961-2009)
I Sit and Sew, by Alice Dunbar-Nelson [née Moore] (1875-1935)
When the Night and Morning Meet, by Dora Greenwell (1821-1882)
In the dark and narrow street,
Into a world of woe,
Where the tread of many feet
Went trampling to and fro,
A child was born — speak low!
When the night and morning meet.
Full seventy summers back
Was this, so long ago,
The feet that wore the track
Are lying straight and low;
Yet hath there been no lack
Of passers to and fro
Within the narrow street
This childhood ever played;
Beyond the narrow street
This manhood never strayed;
This age sat still and prayed
Anear the trampling feet.
The tread of ceaseless fett
Flowed through his life, unstirred
By waters’ fall, or fleet
Wind music, or the bird
Of morn; these sounds are sweet,
But they were still unheard.
Within the narrow street
I stood beside a bed,
I held a dying head
When the night and morning meet’
And every word was sweet,
Though few the words we said.
And as we talked, dawn drew
To day, the world was fair
In fields afar, I knew;
Yet spoke not to him there
Of how the grasses grew,
Besprent with dewdrops rare.
We spoke not of the sun,
Nor of this green earth fair;
This soul, whose day was done,
Had never claimed its share
In these, and yet its rare
Rich heritage had won.
From the dark and narrow street
Into a world of lvoe
A child was born — speak low,
Speak reverent, for we know
Not how they speak above,
When the night and morning meet.
After Apple-Picking, by Robert Frost (1874-1963)
My long two-pointed ladder’s sticking through a tree
I pulled into the Galdini Sausage plant at noon.
The workers walked out of production
and swatted away the flies desperate for pork.
Pork gripped the men and was everywhere,
in the form of blood, in the form of fat,
and in pink meat stuck to the worker’s shoes.
Outside, eighty pound boxes of pork
melted under the sun, and as the sun worked,
the blood and fat grew soft, and the boxes
lined with wax became like thin paper soaked in oil.
Mack trucks came in with unprocessed pork
and took out chorizo, linguica, hot links, and sausage:
German, Sweet, Breakfast, Hot, and Mild.
One man stood straight up into the sky,
closed his eyes, and with his thumb and forefinger,
worked out bits of meat from his eyelashes
glistening like black grease under the sun.
The air conditioner in Mr. Galdini’s’s office
made the papers from his desk float onto the floor.
He gave me a hard hat, a smock, an apron, and a hair net.
“You’re in there,” he said and lifted the blinds
of a window that partitioned his office and production.
He stood, gut pushed out, and his whole body
swayed with ease as we watched the workers walk out,
hump-backed under the unyielding memory of pig.
Equation, by Caroline Caddy (1944-)
January in Detroit or Search For Tomorrow Starring Ken and Ann, by Ken Mikolowski
Beautiful Youth, by Gottfried Benn (1886-1956)
The Murdered Traveller, by William Cullen Bryant (1794-1878)
When spring, to woods and wastes around,
Brought bloom and joy again,
The murdered traveller’s bones were found,
Far down a narrow glen.
The fragrant birch, above him, hung
Her tassels in the sky;
And many a vernal blossom sprung,
And nodded careless by.
The red-bird warbled, as he wrought
His hanging nest o’erhead,
And fearless, near the fatal spot,
Her young the partridge led.
But there was weeping far away,
And gentle eyes, for him,
With watching many an anxious day,
Were sorrowful and dim.
They little knew, who loved him so,
The fearful death he met,
When shouting o’er the desert snow,
Unarmed, and hard beset;–
Nor how, when round the frosty pole
The northern dawn was red,
The mountain wolf and wild-cat stole
To banquet on the dead;
Nor how, when strangers found his bones,
They dressed the hasty bier,
And marked his grave with nameless stones,
Unmoistened by a tear.
But long they looked, and feared, and wept,
Within his distant home;
And dreamed, and started as they slept,
For joy that he was come.
So long they looked–but never spied
His welcome step again,
Nor knew the fearful death he died
Far down that narrow glen.
Another Insane Devotion, by Gerald Stern (1925-)