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Authority

At the beginning the oldest man sat on the corner

of the garden wall by the road under a vast

walnut tree known to have been there always

he came back in the afternoon to the cave of shade

in his broad black hat black jacket the striped gray

wool trousers once worn only to church in winter

with a cane on either side resting against the stones

he said when your legs have gone all you can do

is to sit this way and be useless I believe God

he said that is what I am doing I am thinking

and things come to me now when nobody else knows them

he was visited by the dazzling of accidents the boy

who caught his hand in the trip hammer and it came out

like cigarette paper the man with both crushed legs

dangling and the woman murdered and his father the blacksmith

forging the iron fence to put around the place

out on the bare slope where she had fallen I could never

be the smith my father was as he always told me

I was good enough you know but I never had

the taste needed for scythe blades sickles kitchen knives

we preferred to use carriage springs to make them from

in the forge outside the barn there and his were sought after

oh when he had sold all he took to the fair the others

could begin I still have the die for stamping the name

of the village in the blade at the end so you could be sure

w
Written by
W. S. Merwin
1927 - Present / American
Lines·Words
25·264
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