Lawrence Hall Mhall46184@aol.com https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/ poeticdrivel.blogspot.com
An Unskilled Rotor-Tiller Tiller of the Soil
Plough Monday was by-passed some weeks ago The Virus of Many Names kept me abed And then the snow and ice kept me inside And then – indolence, indolence, okay?
But today, oh, today!
The morning was fresh and cool and damp and still I wheeled the tiller into the garden patch Fresh gasoline, then primed the little bulb And turned the red plastic lever just so
And pulled the cord And pulled the cord And pulled the cord And said bad words And pulled the cord And pulled the cord And pulled the cord And snarled bad words And pulled the cord –
Pow!
For smoke and fire And noise – hooray! Then forward the tines
The tines at first bounced off the new green grass I pulled the smoke and noise machine back, back And held the smoke and noise machine in place And wrestled it, pinning it to the earth until
It bit into the grass, the bright spring grass And hurled it back, and then some earth, and more And still more earth, sweet earth, the nourishing earth Flung up and out and back again, and down
And there the earth must rest for a few weeks Then to be turned again, sweet and warm To receive the ready seeds of happy new life And join in the miracle of Creation
And in the summer when the soft breezes blow Zinnias and sunflowers and wild marigolds Will lift their heads and sing hymns to the sun And bees and hummingbirds hum the “Amen”
And in those days I will speak kind words To them all, and study rotor-tillers no more