I pray for winter. Summer is fat and beyond repair. It hardly rains — children on bikes, on swings bite the wind. Children eat sky from trampolines, take clumps of it in their fists
And fall back on their fevers laughing, yet to learn the heft of sag. O! Manic youth — you’ll throw your greasy chain. Will it be cottonwood or cloud that litters the yard come Autumn? Who’s to know.
When I see children, I see cruelty, decay and brown ache tumbling from its stem: the rake, the shovel, the whine and drag, some lean deer breaking corn by the grain bins, the short hex of old cloud on my tongue.
Soon they’ll be shuttered in winter’s dry heats these children: cold-sore, chapped, their bikes hung carcass from hooks in the ceiling — like those old men that trim hedges, ****, sip ambers and broth, wait for snow like those old women that pry ticks off their backs.