poetry 04 Apr 2006 08:55 am

not fall but…

This little gem was on my friend Sarah’s blog.

We are most certainly poetry-kindred spirits *or* she simply possesses an uncanny ability to pick just the right poem to prick my senses. This one speaks of harvest time in September, a bursting-full of life image that I call to mind as I work the furrows of my garden, turn over this heavy clay, and contemplate how to keep squirrels away from my corn seeds. This is an image of a full and hearty life, healthy children and simmering warmth, and the radiant joy of gathering in after a day well done.

A Pot of Red Lentils

simmers on the kitchen stove.
All afternoon dense kernels
surrender to the fertile
juices, their tender bellies
swelling with delight.

In the yard we plant
rhubarb, cauliflower, and artichokes,
cupping wet earth over tubers,
our labor the germ
of later sustenance and renewal.

Across the field the sound of a baby crying
as we carry in the last carrots,
whorls of butter lettuce,
a basket of red potatoes.

I want to remember us this way—
late September sun streaming through
the window, bread loaves and golden
bunches of grapes on the table,
spoonfuls of hot soup rising
to our lips, filling us
with what endures.

Reprinted from “Saying the World,” 2003, by permission of Copper Canyon Press. Copyright © 2003 by Peter Pereira. This weekly column is supported by The Poetry Foundation, The Library of Congress, and the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

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