Tom and collaborated on this poetry broadside (or "broadsheet," as they are sometimes called). Tom wrote the poem and I drew the drawing. We gave it to Nancy, Tom's sister, for her birthday. Nancy now owns the property where this venerable out-house still stands, just down the driveway from our house.
Here's the poem for those of you who don't have a magnifying glass to hand:
OUT-HOUSE ODE
When I pulled with my tractor the dead
oak limb poised to crush the out-house,
and it fell, kicking off a patch of shingles
and scarring the roof, I wondered at
that out-house, unused now sixty years,
thought of your satisfying plops and farts,
Russell, you who built it next to your magnificent
concrete bridge, you, dead now half a
century, who sailed your yawl to
old charts stashed in the main house still
bearing your waypoints and courses,
and your meadow, boat-house, wooden
row-boats, the long brass telescope
to watch, you said, yachts run aground
in the cove, all of this in the place you
gave abruptly to our family sixty years ago,
I thought of you, relieved in your
outhouse, planning projects with your
shackles and lines, your taps and dies,
your water-cooled grindstone, and I thought
of your wife reading her French newspaper,
brewing tea to serve on the fine china
that you also left in this house on the
coast, a gift of high kindness by you, to us.
trm
2 comments:
Now THAT's an interestingly different post... Oh the stories that so many old buildings, trees, rocks, etc. could tell of days gone by...
Beautiful work from both of you...no, from all three of you, counting Russell! Thank you for celebrating the glorious commonplace in word and image.
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