Around the table, literacy discussion Turns elitist... Bemoaning some poor Johnny, Son of a plumber who does not read Beyond the practical need, And has no desire to.
I stop to check my sense of what I have just heard... Am transported back to a prairie farm And think of my Father, now in his eighties Who still feels no need and no sense of loss For not having read Shakespeare or Kant For missing Milton's Paradises and Hemingway, For by-passing Black Elk Speaks and C.S. Lewis.
Every morning, he reads his Bible; Some nights he reads the mail's Motley collection of literature: Ads and politicians and fanatics, Demanding money and his time, But mostly money.
"I don't have time to read!" He shouts, when I suggest a novel. What literature he has is in his head, Poems memorized when he was a boy In a two room school, or His own lines, written as a young man, Describing work and friends Long distant now, but still alive In memory.
Dad taught me how to read In different literacies and different texts: Nuances of sky to read the weather - What chill or storm or drought was on its way; Cows and calves and bulls - Which one was sick or well, dry or bred; Equipment to diagnose mechanical ailments; Metals to know which welding rod applied; Grain, rolled crisp between his hands, a test of ripeness... Cement to find the perfect mix, So many literacies... Dad, the Master Reader of them all... No wonder he'd no time for books.