Jack

字號:

by Maxine Kumin
     How pleasant the yellow butter
     melting on white kernels, the meniscus
     of red wine that coats the insides of our goblets
     where we sit with sturdy friends as old as we are
     after shucking the garden's last Silver Queen
     and setting husks and stalks aside for the horses
     the last two of our lives, still noble to look upon:
     our first foal, now a bossy mare of 28
     which calibrates to 84 in people years
     and my chestnut gelding, not exactly a youngster
     at 22. Every year, the end of summer
     lazy and golden, invites grief and regret:
     suddenly it's 1980, winter buffets us,
     winds strike like cruelty out of Dickens. Somehow
     we have seven horses for six stalls. One of them,
     a big-nosed roan gelding, calm as a president's portrait
     lives in the rectangle that leads to the stalls. We call it
     the motel lobby. Wise old campaigner, he dunks his
     hay in the water bucket to soften it, then visits the others
     who hang their heads over their dutch doors. Sometimes
     he sprawls out flat to nap in his commodious quarters.
     That spring, in the bustle of grooming
     and riding and shoeing, I remember I let him go
     to a neighbor I thought was a friend, and the following
     fall she sold him down the river. I meant to
     but never did go looking for him, to buy him back
     and now my old guilt is flooding this twilit table
     my guilt is ghosting the candles that pale us to skeletons
     the ones we must all become in an as yet unspecified order.
     Oh Jack, tethered in what rough stall alone
     did you remember that one good winter?