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The Hermit Goes Up Attic

编辑:chaxungu时间:2022-10-13 02:57:39分类:英语诗歌

by Maxine Kumin

Up attic, Lucas Harrison, God rest

his frugal bones, once kept a tidy account

by knifecut of some long-gone harvest.

The wood was new. The pitch ran down to blunt

the year: 1811, the score: 10, he carved

into the center rafter to represent

his loves, beatings, losses, hours, or maybe

the butternuts that taxed his back and starved

the red squirrels higher up each scabbed tree.

1812 ran better. If it was bushels he risked,

he would have set his sons to rake them ankle deep

for wintering over, for wrinkling off their husks

while downstairs he lulled his jo to sleep.

By 1816, whatever the crop goes sour.

Three tallies cut by the knife are all

in a powder of dead flies and wood dust pale as flour.

Death, if it came then, has since gone dry and small.

But the hermit makes this up. Nothing is known

under this rooftree keel veed in with chestnut

ribs. Up attic he always hears the ghosts

of Lucas Harrison's great trees complain

chafing against their mortised pegs,

a woman in childbirth pitching from side to side

until the wet head crowns between her legs

again, and again she will bear her man astride

and out of the brawl of sons he will drive like oxen

tight at the block and tackle, whipped to the trace,

come up these burly masts, these crossties broken

from their growing and buttoned into place.

Whatever it was is now a litter of shells.

Even at noon the attic vault is dim.

The hermit carves his own name in the sill

that someone after will take stock of him.


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