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Still Here

Not much else to say about it.

By Tim CarmichaelPublished about 5 hours ago 1 min read
Photo credit: The Augusta Chronicle

The stove's balky. Won't catch.

I coax it with a match, talk to it

the way you talk to mules.

*

Somebody's laid by a garden down the road

where no house stands. Beans climb

dead strings. Squash gone to seed.

*

My dentist says I grind my teeth at night.

*

Revival's on at the brush arbor.

You can hear them clear to the ridgetop

not words, just the sound of wanting

pushed out into the dark.

*

Saw a boy carrying water

in two lard buckets, yoke across his shoulders.

Thought that he was done. Thought wrong.

*

There's a rock house back of the property

where somebody carved initials, and 1892.

Deep grooves. Took them all day, I reckon.

Whoever they were is bones now,

but the letters are there.

I asked myself once why I don't leave.

Didn't have an answer then.

Don't need one now.

*

The garden keeps. The stove lights

when it's ready. I'm still here

come morning, come winter,

come whatever's coming.

Not much else to say about it.

Free Verse

About the Creator

Tim Carmichael

Tim is an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. He writes about rural life, family, and the places he grew up around. His poetry and essays have appeared in Beautiful and Brutal Things, his latest book.

https://a.co/d/537XqhW

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  • K.B. Silver about 4 hours ago

    👏👏 ⾕🌼

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