Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
From this tree, they lynched John T, for the crime of speaking against slavery. Dead now, this spar stands among Holsteins in the pasture of a man who figures we’re cousins somehow. He, a midwestern farmer, me, a California craftsman, political poles apart but blood is thicker than geography. Ancient black walnut hollowed by rot is tough to salvage. Working together with chain saw and wrecking bar we find a section of solid core, and on the surface a scar like a grinning face where the branch broke off, long gone one hundred fifty years, the branch that held the rope that swung John T’s three hundred and fifty pounds of muscle and fat and bluster until it snapped. John T, who was the grandfather of my grandfather, ran into the forest where his best friend rescued him, a man named, ironically, Lynch, grandfather of the grandfather of the man with whom I speak. Thus, cousins — in the country way. I’ll make salad bowls, I say, wooden forks and tongs, walnut plates, maybe even a tea set for your daughter who seems so outspoken, so feisty and strong. Tea set? he says, she needs a lectern! So here it is. The grinning knot on the surface. Those holes in the side, from bullets. Lead slugs. I dug them out. Here, this cloth sack. May she heft them in her fist. May her words fire like cannons for freedom.
0
May 14, 2016
May 14, 2016 at 1:06 PM UTC
The Family Tree
From this tree, they lynched John T, for the crime of speaking against slavery. Dead now, this spar stands among Holsteins in the pasture of a man who figures we’re cousins somehow. He, a midwestern farmer, me, a California craftsman, political poles apart but blood is thicker than geography. Ancient black walnut hollowed by rot is tough to salvage. Working together with chain saw and wrecking bar we find a section of solid core, and on the surface a scar like a grinning face where the branch broke off, long gone one hundred fifty years, the branch that held the rope that swung John T’s three hundred and fifty pounds of muscle and fat and bluster until it snapped. John T, who was the grandfather of my grandfather, ran into the forest where his best friend rescued him, a man named, ironically, Lynch, grandfather of the grandfather of the man with whom I speak. Thus, cousins — in the country way. I’ll make salad bowls, I say, wooden forks and tongs, walnut plates, maybe even a tea set for your daughter who seems so outspoken, so feisty and strong. Tea set? he says, she needs a lectern! So here it is. The grinning knot on the surface. Those holes in the side, from bullets. Lead slugs. I dug them out. Here, this cloth sack. May she heft them in her fist. May her words fire like cannons for freedom.
I had to delete this from Hello Poetry while a journal published it. The journal, an anthology called Dove Tales, is out now, so here's the poem back where it first appeared.
joe-cottonwood
Written by
May 14, 2016
May 14, 2016 at 1:06 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem