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                                      CHARM  
                                       
                                      I cannot know what that crow says  
                                                     but 
                                      I would warrant that it is nothing 
                                      incidental, nothing that can wait,  
                                                     and 
                                      nothing that we need to know 
                                      before this one last turn around the block. 
                                       
                                                     The 
                                      doctor is waiting with some news.  
                                      It used to be a doctor was a teacher,  
                                                     he'd 
                                      teach us how to keep our bodies, he'd help 
                                      fill our minds to feed our hearts. But now 
                                       
                                                     we 
                                      have a phone call, now we have 
                                      to be ready for anything. There are procedures 
                                                     to 
                                      explain, and something like odds.  
                                      Chances are, what the crow says is 
                                      pertinent,  
                                                     but 
                                      in this foot-full of leaves we brush aside 
                                      lies any number of possibilities and at 
                                      least one  
                                                     alley 
                                      we have never considered before.  
                                      We have little time. We have little to say. 
                                       
                                                     Listen, 
                                      the crow is not divine; his caw is just 
                                      perhaps, but if I call upon him as an image, 
                                       
                                                     then 
                                      I declare him to be only that.  
                                      Let no black bird be anything else than 
                                      that  
                                                     which 
                                      comes into my musings to represent 
                                      the constant and normal, tragic and daily 
                                       
                                                     inventions 
                                      that any father might imagine 
                                      when before him a perfect boy points upward 
                                       
                                                     in 
                                      autumn to the same two doves perched 
                                      on the same two wires he pointed to last 
                                      autumn.  
                                                     Let 
                                      me now declare that this crow beckons 
                                      only what's already past, and that where 
                                      our only boy  
                                                     has 
                                      one brother and one little sister, neither 
                                      having suffered any kind of misery, there 
                                      only  
                                                     as 
                                      a dreamer shall he lay a leaf by the head 
                                      of each, and I accompany him, and I bring 
                                      him  
                                                     home 
                                      to wake in peace and in full being 
                                      between me his father, and her his only 
                                      mother.  
                                       
                                       
                                      THE HANDWORM'S HIPBONE 
                                       
                                      Under the overturned wheelbarrow,  
                                                     in 
                                      the dark of that insulated space  
                                      warmed by the decay of last year's leaves, 
                                       
                                                     is 
                                      the dark of the dark and building soil, 
                                       
                                      is the dark of the ever-dampening.  
                                       
                                      And when I overturned the overturned  
                                                     wheelbarrow, 
                                      the dark flew out like a covey,  
                                      like sparrows, and having been for so long 
                                      so  
                                                     used 
                                      to all of its damp and warm  
                                      containment, and having fled so quickly, 
                                       
                                       
                                      it left behind the decayed, or half-decayed 
                                       
                                                     body 
                                      of an ordinary bird, a black bird,  
                                      the remnants of its red brassards browning 
                                       
                                                     beside 
                                      it. The remnants of last year's leaves  
                                      also lain by its head for so long as to 
                                      be 
                                       
                                      blackening beside it, silent and benign, 
                                       
                                                     as 
                                      if sent there by charm to diminish  
                                      some inconsequential thing shamefully  
                                                     placed 
                                      in a dark space in a dark time  
                                      to become naught in the heart of the harrower. 
                                       
                                       
                                       
                                       
                                      RUNIAN  
                                                                  -OE 
                                      v. to whisper; run, n. whisper, mystery, 
                                      secret counsel. 
                                    Whisper this one. Small brown trout attend 
                                      the weeds;  
                                                      
                                      brookies wave with the cutbank mosses. The 
                                      holsteins  
                                      move off to the other side of the coulee. 
                                      And you 
                                                      
                                      hackle of pheasant, pipe felt and beadpace 
                                      up-stream.  
                                      Still, the silent dew, the small browns, 
                                      the nymph descending. 
                                    II 
                                    Something making you weepforecast 
                                      backcastthe last star  
                                                      
                                      recedes into the blue-jaundiced silt of 
                                      dawn. The mist  
                                      accretes in the pasture. Holsteins lumber 
                                      off. Something has you  
                                                      
                                      weeping. Your small son sleeps. Forecast 
                                      backcast forecast release.  
                                      A new hatch lights on the pool, new browns 
                                      rise the first time. 
                                    III 
                                    In the deep shadow, the knee-deep water 
                                      clatter, I come  
                                                      
                                      against a scrimshaw of prickly ash and barbed-wire 
                                       
                                      backlit by early yellow dawn. My nymph bounces 
                                      on the roil.  
                                                      
                                      Inside that dark lacuna, a giant, a water-demonor 
                                       
                                      a big trout. I stiffen, barb-bitten, pulled 
                                      by the downy silt. 
                                    IV 
                                    Five a.m., I'm racing a big yellow sun 
                                      out of town  
                                                      
                                      to Shadow Coulee. Something's frothing in 
                                      the stream,  
                                      gathering over the grassy islands, across 
                                      every hanging reed.  
                                                      
                                      I'm too close yet. The browns see us coming; 
                                      they can  
                                      taste our plans like a bad word, like soap 
                                      in the mouth. 
                                    V 
                                    One little brown lost to our silent scrimmage, 
                                      two  
                                                      
                                      big muskrats bounding pool to pasture, three 
                                       
                                      nymphs caught in the reeds, four in the 
                                      long grasses,  
                                                      
                                      five impossible tangles five times a day, 
                                      five days  
                                      to fish for five fish a day, and one little 
                                      brown away, away. 
                                                   
                                     
                                    CHARM  
                                     
                                    I cannot know what that crow says  
                                                   but 
                                    I would warrant that it is nothing 
                                    incidental, nothing that can wait,  
                                                   and 
                                    nothing that we need to know 
                                    before this one last turn around the block. 
                                     
                                                   The 
                                    doctor is waiting with some news.  
                                    It used to be a doctor was a teacher,  
                                                   he'd 
                                    teach us how to keep our bodies, he'd help 
                                    fill our minds to feed our hearts. But now 
                                     
                                                   we 
                                    have a phone call, now we have 
                                    to be ready for anything. There are procedures 
                                                   to 
                                    explain, and something like odds.  
                                    Chances are, what the crow says is 
                                    pertinent,  
                                                   but 
                                    in this foot-full of leaves we brush aside 
                                    lies any number of possibilities and at least 
                                    one  
                                                   alley 
                                    we have never considered before.  
                                    We have little time. We have little to say. 
                                     
                                                   Listen, 
                                    the crow is not divine; his caw is just 
                                    perhaps, but if I call upon him as an image, 
                                     
                                                   then 
                                    I declare him to be only that.  
                                    Let no black bird be anything else than that 
                                     
                                                   which 
                                    comes into my musings to represent 
                                    the constant and normal, tragic and daily 
                                     
                                                   inventions 
                                    that any father might imagine 
                                    when before him a perfect boy points upward 
                                     
                                                   in 
                                    autumn to the same two doves perched 
                                    on the same two wires he pointed to last autumn. 
                                     
                                                   Let 
                                    me now declare that this crow beckons 
                                    only what's already past, and that where our 
                                    only boy  
                                                   has 
                                    one brother and one little sister, neither 
                                    having suffered any kind of misery, there 
                                    only  
                                                   as 
                                    a dreamer shall he lay a leaf by the head 
                                    of each, and I accompany him, and I bring 
                                    him  
                                                   home 
                                    to wake in peace and in full being 
                                    between me his father, and her his only mother. 
                                     
                                     
                                     
                                    THE HANDWORM'S HIPBONE 
                                     
                                    Under the overturned wheelbarrow,  
                                                   in 
                                    the dark of that insulated space  
                                    warmed by the decay of last year's leaves, 
                                     
                                                   is 
                                    the dark of the dark and building soil,  
                                    is the dark of the ever-dampening.  
                                     
                                    And when I overturned the overturned  
                                                   wheelbarrow, 
                                    the dark flew out like a covey,  
                                    like sparrows, and having been for so long 
                                    so  
                                                   used 
                                    to all of its damp and warm  
                                    containment, and having fled so quickly,  
                                     
                                    it left behind the decayed, or half-decayed 
                                     
                                                   body 
                                    of an ordinary bird, a black bird,  
                                    the remnants of its red brassards browning 
                                     
                                                   beside 
                                    it. The remnants of last year's leaves  
                                    also lain by its head for so long as to be 
                                     
                                    blackening beside it, silent and benign,  
                                                   as 
                                    if sent there by charm to diminish  
                                    some inconsequential thing shamefully  
                                                   placed 
                                    in a dark space in a dark time  
                                    to become naught in the heart of the harrower. 
                                     
                                     
                                     
                                     
                                    RUNIAN 
                                                                  -OE 
                                      v. to whisper; run, n. whisper, mystery, 
                                      secret counsel. 
                                    Whisper this one. Small brown trout attend 
                                      the weeds;  
                                                      
                                      brookies wave with the cutbank mosses. The 
                                      holsteins  
                                      move off to the other side of the coulee. 
                                      And you 
                                                      
                                      hackle of pheasant, pipe felt and beadpace 
                                      up-stream.  
                                      Still, the silent dew, the small browns, 
                                      the nymph descending. 
                                    II 
                                    Something making you weepforecast 
                                      backcastthe last star  
                                                      
                                      recedes into the blue-jaundiced silt of 
                                      dawn. The mist  
                                      accretes in the pasture. Holsteins lumber 
                                      off. Something has you  
                                                      
                                      weeping. Your small son sleeps. Forecast 
                                      backcast forecast release.  
                                      A new hatch lights on the pool, new browns 
                                      rise the first time. 
                                    III 
                                    In the deep shadow, the knee-deep water 
                                      clatter, I come  
                                                      
                                      against a scrimshaw of prickly ash and barbed-wire 
                                       
                                      backlit by early yellow dawn. My nymph bounces 
                                      on the roil.  
                                                      
                                      Inside that dark lacuna, a giant, a water-demonor 
                                       
                                      a big trout. I stiffen, barb-bitten, pulled 
                                      by the downy silt. 
                                    IV 
                                    Five a.m., I'm racing a big yellow sun 
                                      out of town  
                                                      
                                      to Shadow Coulee. Something's frothing in 
                                      the stream,  
                                      gathering over the grassy islands, across 
                                      every hanging reed.  
                                                      
                                      I'm too close yet. The browns see us coming; 
                                      they can  
                                      taste our plans like a bad word, like soap 
                                      in the mouth. 
                                    V 
                                    One little brown lost to our silent scrimmage, 
                                      two  
                                                      
                                      big muskrats bounding pool to pasture, three 
                                       
                                      nymphs caught in the reeds, four in the 
                                      long grasses,  
                                                      
                                      five impossible tangles five times a day, 
                                      five days  
                                      to fish for five fish a day, and one little 
                                      brown away, away. 
            
                 
                                     
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