My grandfather was a share-cropper
Working someone else’s land
My father and uncles worked in industry
Making machines run for corporations
My brothers are tradesmen
Creating things of wood and stone and metal and plastic
I was and am a servant of the state
A manager of programs and a leader of troops
Making plans and enforcing policies that are not my own
I’m also an academic
Writing papers to influence others
Or to teach them the things I know
But I can not shake the feeling that
Despite better compensation
Each of the generations
Have moved farther from truth
For thought it may not carry much honor
In this modern age we live in
There is something honest and basic
That can only be found
Through working in the soil.
Morning Sun
The morning sun rises
Over the Lake of the Ozarks
On a family vacation
In a Post-COVID age
Nearly the Fourth of July
Bass boats and jet skis
Compete with the starlings
Singing the song
Of summertime bliss
From the banks I skip stones
Contemplating the future
Along with the past
The warmth of the sun
And the dark brooding water
Under the surface
Embraced in the cool waves
Lies a sweet respite
From the heat of the sun
And the memories of the desert.
Final Call
You cannot be safe
If you never were safe.
This isn’t baseball,
But there is an umpire
To make the final call.
An American Journey
I am planning a trip with my father and brothers
Following the rivers north and westward from Kansas City
As Lewis and Clark once did
Traveling through Plains and Badlands and Mountains
Seeing with my own eyes
That point where civilization ends
From an Interstate Highway pull-off
The beauty of mountains carved by the hand of God
Or geologic time and erosion
Reshaped by man and high explosives
To form edifices of our memories
The mythology of our great leaders
Causing both awe and embarrassment
Not far away the native peoples create another tableau
Reclaiming the stones as their own
I put my feet and heart at the mouth of the coulee
On the edge of the Little Bighorn River
And imagine how hard it was to run breathlessly to the top of the hill
Being broken in body and spirit when overrun alongside Custer
Simultaneously, I’m bounding from cover to cover like the Crow and the Sioux
Feeling raw emotion
As the land and the white standing stones mark the vanity of
Manifest Destiny at all costs
I hear that Yellowstone in the springtime is gorgeous
If you don’t mind the traffic jams of bears and bison
And tourists lined up in their recreational vehicles
In May, the sun-chasing roads should be open
While the peaks are still blanketed white
And the rivers start to boil with snow-melt
Stampeding like the Rodeo in Cody, Wyoming
I just want to take it all in and
See the West that was
And never was
And never really could be
But still is the West
The one that lives in our collective memories and pulses with the heartbeat of
America
Battledress
From the square plots,
Of clipped Kentucky rye,
And perfect planters,
Where porch colors fly.
To solace in the weeds,
Growing, flowing, refuse,
In between the cracks,
Of neglect and abuse.
“Gone native” they say,
As if it’s progress undone.
But nothing is ironed here,
Except the will to be one.