Father was a quarryman, hands at home On a welded wheel, fingers stiff waiting on sun To clear the lip of the pit, an artist is his own right
Content to read the grain through an emery palm Leave the rest to rain and wind. Mother on the other Hand was a chiseler with a syncopated mallet
No stranger to fluter and veiner, fine dust felting Her coffee, laboring late, ankle deep in drifting flake Humming as she whittled to the quick.
One morning, seeing my chance, right hand freed In the wee, wee hours, I hacked out feet and a face Only a mother could love, raking footprints clean as I left.